Minutes of silence is one way to pay respect to the 96, but the best way is to make sure that it never happens again. Not in a stadium, not in a club, not anywhere.<P>Nine people got crushed to death at the Roskilde festival 2000, 63 people got burnt alive in an overcrowded club in Gothenburg in 1998 and the fot**** disasters continue to happen; 1996 - 9 killed, 78 injured in Zambia; 1996 - 83 killed, 200 injured in Guatemala; 2000 - 13 killed in Zimbabwe (these are just a few examples).<P>It is obvious (referring to Zambia, Guatemala and Zimbabwe) that a lack of money, and therefore a lack of safety precautions, causes these tragedies to continue to happen to this very day. Sadly, in a way, little has changed.<P>I\'m not putting any blame on the victims (God knows I wouldn\'t) but there is also a responsibility on everybody attending a game, a concert or whatever crowded place you want. The next time you [reluctantly] participate in a fire drill or someone guides you through the emergency routines, don\'t just laugh it away, and if you notice that there is something missing in safety, let somebody in charge know. It might just save your (and others) life you know...<P>--------------------------------------------------------------------<P>With a season ticket to eternity, I hope the grass really is greener on the other side.<P>Justice for the 96 and justice for all and as Voltaire put it - \"One owes respect to the living, to the dead one owes only the truth\".


