will ripley, thanks so much. appreciate that. as will mentioned there sadly this isn t the first time that incidents at soccer matches have led to tragic loss of life. april 1989 the fa cup semifinal between liverpool and nottingham forest overcrowding at the stadium in sheffield, england, led to the deaths of 97 liverpool supporters following a crash. 21 years ago in ghana around 126 people were killed in a soccer stadium stampede when police fired tear gas at rioting fans, it was one of africa s worst soccer disasters. and then in the 1960s as will mentioned more than 300 fans in lima, perú, lost their lives during an olympic qualifying match between perú and argentina. we will continue to monitor the tragedy in indonesia and will give you updates as soon as we learn more. in florida at least 66 deaths have been reported from
back to normal programming. and i think probably the answer is sometime tomorrow night. now, when the funeral plans start, when the process of the funeral begins, those schedules are going to be cleared again. so it is a huge operation. soccer matches, for example tomorrow have been called off. a lot of people are wondering i think, well okay how long must this go on for? is it really necessary? but it is, as you, say a massive logistics operation. and we have already seen details of the playing out. just what we saw this morning in front of the city of london, in front of the exchange. the procession, everybody knew where to be. that has been practiced now for years. john, talk to me about what it was like in the bbc as you are doing these rehearsals. and it was mrs. robinson, the term that was used. so nobody mistakenly put over
champion talking about their support. we saw it in soccer matches in wales. people standing up and shouting glory to ukraine. this is an international movement. yeah. freedom-loving people everywhere are supporting the ukrainians. you can t put a price tag on that when it comes to winning a war and coming out at the end on top of your opponent, who, as russians are now starting to see even on russian television, their country is isolated from the world. coming up, uk prime minister boris johnson keeps his job, but just barely. we re going to go live to london for more on the possible fallout from yesterday s no confidence vote. also ahead, new data on the so-called great reshuffling. what we re learning about the millions of americans who were laid off at the start of the pandemic. we ll be right back with much more morning joe.
to the ice i m russian. washington capitals superstar ovechkin calling the russian invasion of ukraine a hard situation. i have lots of friends in russia and ukraine. it s hard to see the war. i hope soon is going to be over and going to be peace in the whole world. but he also said vladimir putin is his president and said he was not in politics. on instagram, a black screen posted by russian soccer player smolov who captioned his post no to war. soccer players around the world showing support for ukraine. refusing to play in any potential soccer matches against russia in the world cup qualifiers. some international gymnastics and boxing organizations taking
the sports governing body taking a stand against one of its biggest advocates in response to the russian invasion of ukraine. putin is a black belt in judo and co-authored the book of judo, history, theory and practice. we ve seen putin play ice hockey, ride horses, sometimes shirtless and judo is what he cares most about. this must sting. meanwhile, fifa stopped short of stripping russia from world cup qualifying yesterday. instead they decided the squad can play using the rfu acronym of its russian football union, the unanimous union by the fifa council also said that the russian flag and anthem can not be associated with the team and that it can only play on neutral territory and without spectators, but the move does not go far november for poland, sweden and the czech republic. all three have announced their intent to refuse any soccer matches against russia during