
Court hands out 18-month sentence for negligence in an outcome that is likely to disappoint families of the 135 who died.
One of three police officers charged over the deadly crowd crush that left 135 people dead in Indonesia has been jailed after being found guilty of negligence.
The court in the Indonesian city of Surabaya, some 780km (484 miles) east of the capital, Jakarta, sentenced Hasdarmawan, who headed the regional unit of the paramilitary police squad known as Brimob, to 18 months in prison.
It is still announcing its verdict for the other officers charged over the disaster.
Two match officials have already been jailed over last October’s crush, which came at the end of a hard-fought match between bitter rivals Arema FC and Persebaya Surabaya in Malang, East Java.
Away fans were banned from the game but as spectators flooded on to the pitch after the final whistle police fired volleys of tear gas. Amid the clouds of smoke, people rushed for the exit gates in panic only to discover some of the gates were locked, trapping them inside.
Police described the pitch invasion as a riot and said two officers were killed, but survivors accused them of overreacting.
Videos showed officers using force, kicking and hitting fans with batons, and pushing spectators back into the stands.
An investigation team set up by Indonesian President Joko Widodo amid national outrage over the deaths concluded that the tear gas was the main cause of the crowd surge.
An investigation by Indonesia’s human rights body came to the same conclusion, saying the use of tear gas, banned by football’s world governing body, was “indiscriminate” and “excessive”.
Of the 135 people who died, 38 were under the age of 17 and the youngest was just three years old.
In the wake of the tragedy, the head of the Indonesian National Police, Listyo Sigit Prabowo sacked the Malang Chief of Police, Ferli Hidayat, and relieved nine Brimob officers of their duties.
The trial of the three officers and the match officials began in January and has been dogged by complaints.
Video shared on social media last month appeared to show Indonesian police officers attempting to disrupt that trial, jeering and heckling as prosecutors arrived at court on February 14.
With reporting by Syarina Hasibuan in Surabaya.