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Football mourns as plane crash kills Brazilian players

The football world mourned after a plane carrying a Brazilian team crashed in the mountains in Colombia, killing 71 people but miraculously leaving six survivors, officials said.

Football legends Pele and Maradona as well as current superstars Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo led tributes to the players of Chapecoense Real, a humble team whose march to glory was cut abruptly short.

Having risen only recently from obscurity, the team was on its way to play in the finals of the Copa Sudamericana, South America's second-biggest club tournament, when the disaster struck.

"The pain is terrible. Just as we had made it, I will not say to the top, but to have national prominence, a tragedy like this happens," club vice-president Ivan Tozzo said. "It is very difficult, a very great tragedy."

Colombia's civil aviation authority initially said 75 people were killed, but it later emerged that four people on the passenger manifest had not in fact boarded the plane — a club official, a journalist, the mayor of the team's hometown and the city council president.

"It's one of those things in life. Only God knows why I ended up staying behind," the mayor, Luciano Buligon, said.

The six survivors are being treated in hospital, officials said.

Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos called it a "sad tragedy," and Brazil's President Michel Temer declared three days of mourning.

The dead also included 20 Brazilian journalists travelling to cover the match.

The charter plane, flown by Bolivian company LAMIA, departed from the Bolivian city of Santa Cruz and declared an emergency at around 10:00 pm on Monday (0300 GMT on Tuesday).

It reported "electrical failures" and crashed soon after near the city of Medellin, its destination, officials said.

Specialist sites revealed that the same plane was used two weeks ago to fly the Argentine national team with Messi on board to San Juan, Argentina for a World Cup qualifying match.

Rescuers and aviation authorities said the survivors were three players, two crew members and a journalist. "I have just seen the plane and given the state it is in, it is a miracle that six people survived," said Perez, the regional governor. Authorities named the three players who survived as defenders Helio Neto and Alan Ruschel and goalkeeper Jakson Follmann.

The team's lead goalkeeper Marcos Danilo Padilha, 31, died on the way to hospital, the civil aviation authority said. His last-minute save in the semi-final had ensured the team made it through to the Copa Sudamericana final.

The cup final first-leg had been scheduled for Wednesday against Atletico Nacional of Colombia.

In an emotional gesture, Nacional called in a statement for the title to be handed to its Brazilian opponents "as a posthumous homage to the victims of the fatal accident that has put our sport in mourning."

Regional football confederation CONMEBOL suspended the game. It had yet to announce how the title would be settled. A source close to CONMEBOL told that it was "very unlikely" that the final would ever be played.

After decades in the lower divisions, Chapecoense returned to Brazil's top flight in 2014 for the first time since 1979. "We have moved from a dream to a true nightmare," said Buligon, the mayor. 
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