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Huge crowds celebrating Mexico's World Cup victory resulted in four deaths

Mexico City's central avenue was thronged with hundreds of thousands fans celebrating the victory of Mexico over Ecuador in their first World Cup knockout game in 40 years.

Mexico City's Department of Health said that in the early morning hours of Wednesday, emergency teams treated three unconscious individuals at various locations along the Paseo de la Reforma boulevard where giant screens were set up to show the match.

The health authority reported that a woman aged 19 and a man aged 44 both died from suffocation despite advanced resuscitation. A 48-year-old woman died of asphyxiation in the hospital. Later, authorities reported that a man aged in his 30s died after being taken to hospital with severe seizures and bleeding from the gastrointestinal tract. He died from a cardiac event.

The crowds grew with every Mexican win as the team advanced through the tournament, which the soccer-mad nation is hosting jointly with the U.S.A. and Canada for the first time in 1986. In recent weeks, Mexico City banned alcohol sales on match days for Mexico and increased the number of screens as well as the distance between them in an effort to improve safety. More than 2 km of Paseo de la Reforma was closed for traffic on Tuesday and covered with giant screens that showed the match. Around a million people gathered, according to the city government.

LOCAL REPORTS: CROWD PANIC CAUSED CRUSH The local newspaper El Universal reported the fatal crowd crush was triggered by pyrotechnics that caused panic. People started to run, and some fell and were trampled.

Patricia Garcia, 54, a housewife from Mexico, said in the early morning hours of Wednesday that she was 'delighted by the Mexican victory, but that the situation had gotten out of control.

"I'm not a fan of excessive celebrations. You can't let others be affected by it. She said, "Freedom has limits and these limits are where someone else's freedom starts."

Videos posted on social media revealed chaotic scenes. One video clip, which appears to have been recorded near the Angel monument on Paseo de la Reforma, showed people stuck and unable move as the momentum of the dense crowd pushed them and swayed them. Some clips show groups of fans kicking and punching each other at the same location, and then slipping on the ground, covered in foam, cans and bottles.

The Attorney General's Office will investigate what went wrong, and the authorities will evaluate whether any changes are needed ahead of Mexico's match against England in the last-16 on Sunday.

She said this during her morning press conference.

(source: Reuters)