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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Widows struggle after Brazil team wiped out

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Rosa Sulleiro -


Fabienne Belle had already been floored by the news that her husband was killed in the air crash that wiped out Brazil’s Chapecoense football team. Then one day, without warning, she received his old suitcase in the mail.


Once again, she felt the bottom drop out of her life, just as she had on November 29, 2016 when the plane went down.


“I had the sensation that my husband was being sent back to me — in pieces,” said Belle, 47.


For the former schoolteacher, whose husband Cezinha was a physiotherapist for the southern Brazilian club, recovery a year later feels fragile.


This time 12 months ago, the long unfavoured Chapecoense had a surprisingly good showing that landed them at the finals of the regional Copa Sudamericana tournament to be played in Colombia.


But the euphoric group that boarded its connecting LaMia flight 2933 out of Bolivia never reached its destination.


Running out of fuel over the mountains outside Medellin, the plane crashed, killing 71 of the 77 people aboard, including 19 players, 14 coaching staff, nine management staff and 20 journalists.


The tragedy also caused havoc in the lives of hundreds more back home.


Generally, these were young families just making their way in a sporting world where injuries or turns in club fortunes can suddenly undermine bank balances and dreams. Those left behind were unprepared.


At first, there was intense mourning and unity in Chapeco, which has been inundated by support from the footballing world.


Many other clubs wore the Chapecoense colours in honour of the dead and in August this year, Barcelona played a charity match against the club.


But as time went on, divisions emerged in the town, with survivors feeling left out as the club dramatically rebuilt and returned to winning ways.


“The club restored itself, getting all the necessary help. It mobilised, marketing itself on the tragedy and relaunching itself, while all these lives were pushed to the side,” Belle said.


She and Mara Paiva, widow of ex-player-turned-commentator Mario Sergio Pontes de Paiva, started the Association of Relatives and Friends of the Victims of the Chapecoense Flight to press for compensation.


“The tragedy was not about the Chapecoense club, it was about the families,” says Paiva, also pushing for more support from media companies whose staff were killed in the plane.


Paiva, 51, has spent the last 12 months trying to rediscover meaning to her life and to fight for someone to be held responsible.


Although she has been paid a life insurance policy, as have the other families, she rejected a $200,000-settlement from the insurers of LaMia airline, offered on condition that any future claims be dropped.


With investigations ongoing in Bolivia and Colombia, it’s too early to draw a line under the affair, she says.


The club, which has already paid out insurance claims, faces 15 more legal cases. Recently, it announced it was donating 28,000 reais ($8,600) a month to Abravic, another victims’ support association, to help pay for schooling.


Abravic member Rosangela Loureiro, widow of midfielder Cleber Santana, accused the club of showing “a lack of respect.”


In her case, life is less complicated because her husband was 35 and at the end of a career that also saw him play at Atletico Madrid and in Japan. They had already planned for a post-football future.


“There are people who are in financial difficulties now, people who were just starting careers,” she said.


Loureiro has moved to Recife in northeastern Brazil with her sons, aged 15 and 12, who both want to become football players. Belle says she’s not ready to move on. — AFP


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