Sport is dyed red (and not because of the uniforms)
What should have been a Sunday of soccer, cheers and shouts of “goal!” ended up becoming a scene of terror worthy of Narcos. A group of subjects, who clearly did not understand that balls are for kicking not for shooting, attacked spectators in Cárdenas, Salamanca. Result: four lives cut short and two injured who are now fighting to recover.
From the pastoral to the field: violence gives no respite
So that they would believe that what happened in March was an “error of the system”, this Holy Monday they repeated the macabre formula: high-powered weapons + public places = guaranteed chaos. While children clung to their parents (who probably just wanted to teach them the love of sports), the criminals put on their own fireworks show. Spoiler alert: no one applauded.
The victims, identified by friends as Carlos (28), Josafat (36), Luis Alberto (38) and Cristian (45), are now part of a statistic that no one wanted to lead. Meanwhile, the Prosecutor’s Office limits itself to confirming the obvious (“yes, they died”) without giving clues about who the geniuses behind this work of terror are.
Moral of the day: In Salamanca, going to football now requires more courage than watching a National Team match on penalties. The “strategy” announced in March? As effective as a blindfolded goalkeeper.
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