As a result, Aston Villa missed out via their league position for 1997–98 and 1998–99 but qualified for both through Fair Play. L'incontro, arbitrato dallo svizzero André Daina, … Some seventeen minutes of film and many still photographs were examined. - Tokyvideo.com You tried to perform an action that is meant for registered users only. As kickoff approached, the throwing became more intense. In Germany, this recording was distributed by SPV GmbH as a charity single under the title "39 (Just A Game)".[36]. Bangor City (1985–86)[note 1], Wrexham (1986–87), Merthyr Tydfil (1987–88), Cardiff City (1988–89), and Swansea City (1989–90) all competed in the Cup Winners' Cup during the ban on English clubs, despite playing in the English league system. The 55-year-old stadium had not been sufficiently maintained for several years, and large parts of the facility were literally crumbling. Une heure avant le coup d'envoi, trente neuf personnes perdent la vie à cause de violents affrontements. In December 1985, FIFA announced that English clubs were also free to play friendly games in Europe, though the Belgian government banned any English clubs playing in their country. 39 people—mostly Italians and Juventus fans—were killed and 600 were injured in the confrontation. British police undertook a thorough investigation to bring the perpetrators to justice. [1], Approximately an hour before the Juventus–Liverpool final was due to kick off, Liverpool supporters charged at Juventus supporters and breached a fence that was separating them from a "neutral area." Create a free account and enjoy all the benefits that Professional football as a spectator sport lay mortally wounded in Brussels last night. The cause of the rampage is disputed: many accounts attribute blame to the Italian fans for sparking the violence, but this claim is contested by other eye-witnesses and has been criticized for being unsubstantiated. [40] In the return leg in Turin, Juventus fans displayed banners reading Easy to speak, difficult to pardon: Murders and 15-4-89. The police, who seemed to have learned nothing from the excellent way their Dutch counterparts handled the Everton supporters in Rotterdam for the Cup-Winners Cup final a fortnight ago, weighed in with riot shields and batons cracking any head they came across. Coming so soon after the Bradford fire disaster, with 53 dead, and the incident in Mexico City this week when 10 people were crushed to death as the crowd struggled to force their way into the Olympic Stadium for the National Cup Final, last night's scenes offered the grimmest reminders that the world's most popular sport is in grave peril. The blame for the incident was laid on the fans of Liverpool. 39 supporters died when rioting Liverpool fans charged Juventus fans before the 1985 European Cup Final at the Heysel stadium. Soccer & Society, 3(1), 37. Leeds United missed out in 1994–95 and initially 1995–96, though they qualified for the latter via the new UEFA Fair Play ranking, which at the time gave their three top-ranking associations' highest-placed team who've not already qualified for Europe a UEFA Cup spot. At the time, Belgium already had a large Italian community, and many expatriate Juventus fans from Brussels, Liège and Charleroi fans bought Section Z tickets. In retaliation for the events in Section Z, many Juventus fans rioted at their end of the stadium. On 29 May 2005, a £140,000 sculpture was unveiled at the new Heysel stadium, to commemorate the disaster. Association Football (FIFA) extended this ban to all worldwide matches, but this was modified a week later to allow friendly matches outside of Europe to take place. [10] A small percentage of the tickets ended up in the hands of Liverpool fans. Crédit image : Nicolas Wyss. The name of the exhibition was "Settanta angeli in un unico cielo – Superga e Heysel tragedie sorelle" (70 angels in the one same heaven – Superga and Heysel sister tragedies) and gathered material from 4 May 1949 and 29 May 1985. Collective hysteria generated by the massive invasion of the pitch by journalists and fans at the end of the match[21] and the chants of fans of both teams in the stands[22] all made some Italian club players celebrate the title in the middle of the pitch among them and in front of their fans in the M section, and some Liverpool players applauded their fans between the X and Z sections, the stadium's section affected. The game was played despite the disaster, with Juventus winning 1–0. Remaining outside the top three of the coefficient rankings, England retained its three UEFA Cup berths instead of four. [3] Many people climbed over to safety, but many others died or were badly injured. Juventus - Liverpool. Due to the weak coefficient, Football League Cup winners Nottingham Forest also missed out on UEFA Cup places in 1990–91, along with Tottenham Hotspur and Arsenal. It was the final match of the 1984-85 season of the European Cup, Europe's premier cup competition. Juventus President Giampiero Boniperti and Liverpool CEO Peter Robinson urged the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) to choose another venue and claimed that Heysel was not in any condition to host a European Final, especially one involving two of the largest and most powerful clubs in Europe. Despite its status as Belgium's national stadium, the Heysel Stadium was in a poor state of repair by the 1985 European Final. On 28 August 1995 the new stadium welcomed the return of football to Heysel in the form of a friendly match between Belgium and Germany. "[26][10] Clarkson discovered that the crush barriers were unable to contain the weight of the crowd and had the reinforcement in the concrete exposed, the wall's piers had been built the wrong way around and that there was a small building at the top of the terrace that contained long plastic tubing underneath. All'incontro assistettero circa 59 000 spettatori. It concluded that blame should rest solely with the Liverpool fans. Association Football, Nottingham Forest (3rd; League Cup winners), English football clubs in international competitions, "Heysel: Liverpool and Juventus remember disaster that claimed 39 lives", Heysel stadium disaster: ‘I saw the rows of bodies piled high’, "Heysel, 27 Years On – Book Extract | The Tomkins Times | News, Opinion, Statistics and Discussion about Liverpool FC Football Club", "Remembering the Heysel stadium disaster", "Night of mayhem in Brussels that will never be forgotten", "Liverpool still torn over night that shamed their name", "Italian fan firing a gun at Belgium police", "Thatcher set to demand FA ban on games in Europe", "FAQ: Qualification and Seeding for the European Cups", "[Archived Content] Football disorder | Home Office", "Liverpool fans mar service for riot victims", "Anniversary monument honours Heysel dead", "Taunts and trouble mar Juve's attempts to deal with the past", Heysel and Superga: Juve and Toro's pain finally united in an exhibition, "EuroBeat: Dortmund farewell Jurgen Klopp, party time for league winners Juventus, Bayern, PSG", "Azzurri a Bruxelles 30 anni dopo la tragedia dell'Heysel: le iniziative della FIGC", "Heysel stadium disaster film is planned", The 39 victims who died at Heysel Stadium, "Il y a trente-deux ans, des Chapellois frappés par le drame du Heysel", "Remembering Belfast man Patrick Radcliffe who died in Heysel tragedy", BBC Sports columnist Alan Hansen – Reds tie evokes Heysel memories, Municipalities of the Brussels-Capital Region, Berchem-Sainte-Agathe / Sint-Agatha-Berchem, Molenbeek-Saint-Jean / Sint-Jans-Molenbeek, Saint-Josse-ten-Noode / Sint-Joost-ten-Node, Watermael-Boitsfort / Watermaal-Bosvoorde, Woluwe-Saint-Lambert / Sint-Lambrechts-Woluwe, Woluwe-Saint-Pierre / Sint-Pieters-Woluwe, Winning isn't important, it's the only thing that matters, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Heysel_Stadium_disaster&oldid=1021319996, Articles containing Italian-language text, Articles needing additional references from May 2016, All articles needing additional references, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License, English clubs banned from European competition for five years; Liverpool for six years, Several top officials, police captain Johan Mahieu, and 14 Liverpool fans convicted of. There is also a tribute to the disaster's victims in the club's Walk of Fame in front of the Juventus Stadium. Welsh clubs playing in the English league system, who could qualify for the European Cup Winners' Cup via the Welsh Cup, were unaffected by the ban. Cose Mai Viste Presenta: Tragedie In Tv: La Strage Dell'heysel Juventus-liverpool (29.05.85) 'a 30 Anni Dall’ Heysel' No need to register, buy now! The Heysel Stadium disaster (German pronunciation: [ˈɦɛizəl]; French pronunciation: ​[ɛizɛl]; Dutch pronunciation: [ˈɦɛizəl]; German: Katastrophe von Heysel; French: Drame du Heysel; Dutch: Heizeldrama; Italian: Tragedia dell'Heysel or Strage dell'Heysel) was a human stampede that occurred on 29 May 1985 when mostly Juventus fans escaping from a breach by Liverpool fans were pressed against a collapsing wall in the Heysel Stadium in Brussels, Belgium, before the start of the 1985 European Cup Final between the Italian and English clubs. Liverpool accueille mardi 5 avril la Juventus Turin en quart de finale aller de la Ligue des champions de football, vingt ans presque jour pour jour après le drame du Heysel le 29 mai 1985 et la mort de 39 personnes, profonde cicatrice dans l'histoire des deux clubs et du sport. In September 1987 they were extradited and formally charged with manslaughter applying to all 39 deaths and further charges of assault. [30] England did not return to the top of the coefficient rankings until 2008.[31]. Reportedly, Liverpool fans were still smarting from being attacked by Roma ultras at the 1984 European Final and placed next to what amounted to another Juventus section heightened tensions before the match. While it is premature to lay the blame wholly at the door of the Liverpool supporters it must be said that before the disturbances there had been little, if any, sign of trouble on the terraces occupied by the Juventus fans. A total of 34 people were arrested and questioned with 26 Liverpool fans being charged with manslaughter—the only extraditable offence applicable to events at Heysel. The fans began to flee toward the perimeter wall of Section Z. They advanced down the stadium running track to help other Juventus supporters, but police intervention stopped the advance. [39], Juventus and Liverpool were drawn together in the quarter-finals of the 2005 Champions League, their first meeting since Heysel. On Wednesday 26 May 2010, a permanent plaque was unveiled on the Centenary Stand at Anfield to honour the Juventus fans who died 25 years earlier. Onze de départ de la Juventus contre Liverpool en 1985. Several groups of Liverpool hooligans broke through the boundary between Section X and Z, overpowered the police and charged at the Juventus fans. [10], Liverpool players and fans later said that they were shocked at Heysel's abject condition, despite reports from Arsenal fans that the ground was a "dump" when Arsenal had played there a few years earlier. By the time of the re-admittance of all English clubs except Liverpool in 1990–91, England was only granted one UEFA Cup entrant (awarded to the league runners-up); prior to the ban, they had four entry slots, a number not awarded to England again under regular means. The teams who missed out on the 1991–92 UEFA Cup, for the same reason were Sheffield Wednesday, Crystal Palace and Leeds United. Regarde résumé vidéo de Juventus - Liverpool gratuitement sur Football Highlight. Nous sommes le 29 mai 1985 et la Juventus s’apprête à affronter Liverpool en finale de la Coupe d’Europe des clubs champions au Heysel. God exists, the latter a reference to the Hillsborough disaster, in which 96 Liverpool fans were killed in a crush. The trial eventually began in October 1988, with three Belgians also standing trial for their role in the disaster: Albert Roosens, the head of the Belgian Football Association, for allowing tickets for the Liverpool section of the stadium to be sold to Juventus fans; and two police chiefs—Michel Kensier and Johann Mahieu—who were in charge of policing at the stadium that night. La finale della 30ª edizione di Coppa dei Campioni si disputò il 29 maggio 1985 presso lo stadio Heysel di Bruxelles tra gli inglesi del Liverpool e gli italiani della Juventus. However, according to The Sydney Morning Herald, it was "drowned out" by chanting. The idea of the large neutral area was opposed by both Liverpool and Juventus,[14] as it would provide an opportunity for fans of both clubs to obtain tickets from agencies or from ticket touts outside the ground and so create a dangerous mix of fans.[12]. On 31 May 1985, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher asked The Football Association (the FA) to withdraw English clubs from European competition before they were banned,[27] but two days later, UEFA banned English clubs for "an indeterminate period of time." Le déclin de la Juventus Malgré un nouveau titre de Champion d'Italie lors de la saison 1985-1986, la Juventus va progressivement décliner et He had taken his Juventus-supporting daughter Giusy to watch the Italian club play English team Liverpool in the 1985 European Cup final in Brussels at the Heysel Stadium. [8] Both teams had contested the 1984 European Super Cup four months earlier, with a victory for Italy 2–0. Enter your search keyword The Heysel Stadium disaster was a human stampede that occurred on 29 May 1985 when mostly Juventus fans escaping from a breach by Liverpool fans were pressed against a collapsing wall in the Heysel Stadium in Brussels, Belgium, before the start of the 1985 European Cup Final between the Italian and English clubs. Quote from UEFA Chief Executive Lars-Christer Olsson in 2004, Learn how and when to remove this template message, International Federation of It is the first time in 21 years of competition that Liverpool has been involved in serious violence. The usual reasons and excuses will be offered. [13], The stadium was crammed with 58,000 to 60,000 supporters, with more than 25,000 for each team. This plaque is one of two permanent memorials to be found at Anfield, along with one for the 96 fans killed in the Hillsborough disaster in 1989. [23], Liverpool players only realised the extent of the tragedy when they boarded their bus at a Brussels hotel to go to the airport, when a crowd of Juventus supporters surrounded the bus. The disaster happened after crowd disorder between Liverpool and Juventus fans at the 1985 European Cup final About an hour before kick off at the 1985 European Cup final, a group of Liverpool … Of that there is no doubt." The 1985 European Cup Final was an association football match between Liverpool of England and Juventus of Italy on 29 May 1985 at the Heysel Stadium, Brussels, Belgium.It was the final match of the 1984-85 season of the Les meilleures offres pour Ticket Juventus - Liverpool European Supercup 1985 sont sur eBay Comparez les prix et les spécificités des produits neufs et d'occasion Pleins d'articles en livraison gratuite! However, to judge by the empty and broken bottles in the centre of Brussels and on the lawns outside the stadium, drink was again at the heart of the problem. UEFA, the organiser of the event, the owners of Heysel Stadium and the Belgian police were investigated for culpability. The following clubs were denied entry to European competitions during this period: The number of places available to English clubs in the UEFA Cup would however have been reduced had English teams been eliminated early in the competition. In 1985, a memorial was presented to the victims at the Juventus headquarters in Piazza Crimea, Turin. [25], Gerry Clarkson, Deputy Chief of the London Fire Brigade (LFB), was sent by the British Government to report on the condition of the stadium. By this point England's coefficient was no longer directly affected by the ban due to it being outside of the five-year window, their coefficient continued to be affected by years of under-representation in the competition. At approximately 7 p.m. local time, an hour before kickoff, the initial disturbance started. [37], In 1991, a memorial monument for the 39 victims of the disaster, the only one on Italian soil, was inaugurated in Reggio Emilia, the hometown of the victim Claudio Zavaroni, in front of Stadio Mirabello: every year the committee "Per non dimenticare Heysel" (In order not to forget Heysel) holds a ceremony on 29 May with relatives of the victims, representatives of Juventus, survivors and various supporters clubs from various football clubs, including Inter Milan, AC Milan, Reggiana and Torino.[38]. [29], England was removed from the rankings in 1990 due to having no points. It then hosted a major European final on 8 May 1996 when Paris Saint-Germain defeated Rapid Vienna 1–0 to win the Cup Winners' Cup. Thu 30 May 1985 06.31 EDT 3 Professional football as a spectator sport lay mortally wounded in Brussels last night. LFChistory.net is all about the history of Liverpool FC. However, the tickets for the Z section were reserved for neutral Belgian fans in addition to the rest of the stadium. This page was last edited on 4 May 2021, at 02:21. Two of the 26 Liverpool fans were in custody in Britain at the time and stood trial later. [46][47][48], Coordinates: 50°53′42″N 4°20′2″E / 50.89500°N 4.33389°E / 50.89500; 4.33389, Spectator riot in Brussels, Belgium on 29 May 1985, Bangor City finished runners-up of the 1984–85 Welsh Cup to English side. La finale de la Coupe des clubs champions européens 1984-1985 est remporté par la Juventus Football Club qui soulève pour la première fois de son histoire le trophée. On 30 May official UEFA observer Gunter Schneider said, "Only the Liverpool fans were responsible. Thirty-nine lights shine, one for each who died that night. [9] In some areas of the stadium, there was only one turnstile, and some fans attending the game claimed that they were never searched or asked for their tickets. Two years later Juventus' officials announced a memorial in the Continassa headquarter. However, the UEFA refused to consider a move. In May 1985, Liverpool were the defending European Champions' Cup winners, having won the competition after defeating Roma in the penalty shootout in the final of the previous season. Find great deals on eBay for juventus liverpool 1985. Since 2001 it has been situated in front of the current club's headquarters in Corso Galileo Ferraris. Before the first leg at Anfield, Liverpool fans held up placards to form a banner saying "amicizia" ("friendship" in Italian). A döntőt egy tragédia árnyékolta be, amelyben 39 szurkoló halt meg. After an eighteen-month investigation, the dossier of top Belgian judge Marina Coppieters was finally published. In May 1985, Liverpool were the defending European Champions' Cup winners, having won the competition after defeating Roma in the penalty shootout in the final of the previous season. Initially, all were held at a Belgian prison but over the subsequent months judges permitted their release as the start of the trial was further delayed. This provoked a violent reaction from the Liverpool fans and it was when the police, heavily outnumbered, lost control of the situation for a minute or two that panic set in among the Juventus supporters who thought they were about to be attacked. The monument includes an epitaph written by Torinese journalist Giovanni Arpino. The disaster was later described as "the darkest hour in the history of the UEFA competitions".[6]. Liverpool's additional year of exclusion from Europe meant that there was no English representation in the 1990–91 European Cup, as they were 1989–90 Football League First Division champions. In February 2014, an exhibition in Turin was dedicated both to the Heysel tragedy and Superga air disaster. On 6 June, the International Federation of The tragedy occurred before the 1985 … The European Cup final between Liverpool and Juventus , a game which promised to represent modern soccer at its best, succumbed to that other modern phenomenon, crowd violence, and this time suffered the full tragic consequences. [26] His report was never used in any inquiry for the disaster.[26]. Many of the Juventus fans applauded the gesture, although a significant number chose to turn their backs on it. A large group of Juventus fans fought the police with rocks, bottles and stones for two hours. 39 people—mostly Italians and Juventus fans—were killed and 600 were injured in the confrontation. The two ends behind the goals comprised all-standing terraces, each end split into three zones. [42], In May 2015, during a Serie A match between Juventus and Napoli at Turin, Juventus fans held up placards to form a banner saying "+39 Rispetto" ("respect +39" in Italian) including the names of the victims of the disaster. The European Cup final between Liverpool and Juventus, a … Sheffield. One Juventus fan was also seen firing a starting gun at Belgian police. Again, they would face Italian opposition, Juventus, which had won unbeaten the 1983–84 Cup Winners' Cup. [28] Throughout the ban, England's points were kept in the ranking until they would have naturally been replaced. For 1993–94, Blackburn Rovers and Queens Park Rangers would have qualified. That meant the Juventus fans had more sections than the Liverpool fans with the Z section, which was nominally reserved for neutrals. The 1985 European Cup Final was a football match between Liverpool of England and Juventus of Italy on 29 May 1985 at the Heysel Stadium, Brussels, Belgium. Years later, Liverpool captain Phil Neal said that in hindsight, it would have been "a better decision" to call off the game. [2] Juventus fans ran back on the terraces and away from the threat into a concrete retaining wall. [4], The tragedy resulted in all English football clubs being placed under an indefinite ban by Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) from all European competitions (lifted in 1990–91), with Liverpool being excluded for an additional three years, later reduced to one,[5] and fourteen Liverpool fans found guilty of manslaughter and each sentenced to three years' imprisonment. For Club and Country: Taking Football Disorder Abroad. [12], Juventus won the match 1–0 thanks to a penalty scored by Platini, which was awarded by the Swiss referee, Daina, for a foul against Zbigniew Boniek. He concluded that the deaths were "...Attributable very, very largely to the appalling state of [the] stadium. According to former Liverpool striker Ian Rush, who signed with Juventus a year later, he saw pronounced improvement in the institutional relationships between both the clubs and their fans during his career in Italy.[11]. [17] Hooligans began to throw flares, bottles and stones across the divide and picked up stones from the crumbling terraces beneath them.[10]. [44] The following day, FIGC president Carlo Tavecchio announced the retirement of Squadra Azzurra's number 39 shirt prior to the friendly match between Italy and Belgium. In April 1989, fourteen fans were convicted and given three-year sentences, half of which were suspended for five years, allowing them to return to the UK. Find the perfect juventus 1 0 liverpool 1985 european stock photo. A Heysel-tragédiát a hetvenes-nyolcvanas években jelentős futballhuliganizmus okozta, mikor 1985. május 29-én, a brüsszeli Heysel Stadionban, az angol Liverpool FC és az olasz Juventus FC mérkőzésén ledőlt egy támfal, 39, többségében olasz szurkoló halálát eredményezve. Liverpool and Juventus were today marking the 30th anniversary of the Heysel disaster which claimed the lives of 39 fans. In April 1990, following years of campaigning from the English football authorities, UEFA confirmed the reintroduction of English clubs (with the exception of Liverpool) into its competitions from the 1990–91 season onward; in April 1991 UEFA's Executive Committee voted to allow Liverpool back into European competition from the 1991–92 season onward, a year later than their compatriots, but two years earlier than initially foreseen. British composer Michael Nyman wrote a piece called "Memorial" which was originally part of a larger work of the same name written in 1985 in memory of the Juventus fans who died at Heysel Stadium. They were also surprised that Heysel was chosen despite its poor condition, especially since Barcelona's Camp Nou and Madrid's Santiago Bernabéu were both available. The main reforms to English stadiums came after the Taylor Report into the Hillsborough disaster in which 96 people died in 1989. In 1986, the band Revolting Cocks, founded in part by Al Jourgensen of Ministry, released a song by the name of "38" on the album Big Sexy Land, in commemoration of the deaths. [15][10] Also, many tickets were bought up and sold by travel agents, mainly to Juventus fans. During Euro 2000, members of the Italian team left flowers on the site, in honour of the victims. Police had to escort the bus out of the lot. [24] One man who was acquitted was Ronnie Jepson, who would go on to make 414 appearances over a thirteen-year career in the English Football League. Az 1985-ös bajnokcsapatok Európa-kupája -döntőben, a BEK 30. döntőjében az olasz Juventus, és az angol Liverpool mérkőzött a brüsszeli Heysel Stadionban. [11][12] It was later discovered that UEFA's inspection of the stadium had lasted just thirty minutes. Rioting at UEFA Euro 2000 saw introduction of new legislation and wider use of police powers—by 2004, 2,000 banning orders were in place, compared to fewer than 100 before Euro 2000.[33][34]. All-seater stadiums became a requirement for clubs in the top two divisions while pitch-side fencing was removed and closed-circuit cameras have been installed. Fans already standing near the wall were crushed; eventually the wall collapsed, allowing others to escape. [45], Of the 39 people killed, 32 were Italian (including two minors), four Belgian, two French, and one from Northern Ireland. Full match of the final of the European Cup of the year 1985 between Juventus and Liverpool. 29 mai 1985| Ligue des Champions | Juventus vs Liverpool Meilleurs moments. TV Eye produced an hour-long programme featuring the footage while British newspapers published the photographs. The monument is a sundial designed by French artist Patrick Rimoux and includes Italian and Belgian stone and the poem "Funeral Blues" by Englishman W. H. Auden to symbolise the sorrow of the three countries. Both teams were placed in the two first positions in the UEFA club ranking at the end of the previous season[7] and were regarded by the specialist press as the two best teams on the continent. Pressure mounted to ban English clubs from European competition. Ruslan Malinovskyi struck late as Atalanta won 1-0 to claim their first league victory over Juventus in two decades and move third in Serie A at the expense of … [19] The players took the field knowing that people had died. [12] The police allowed Liverpool's bus to drive directly onto the tarmac at Brussels Airport in hopes of avoiding a confrontation at the terminal.[10]. Though the English national team was not subjected to any bans, English club sides were banned indefinitely from European club competitions, with Liverpool being provisionally subject to a further three years suspension as well. The Heysel disaster on 29 May 1985 … Ligue des Championsrésumé vidéo du match Juventus - Liverpool. [35], In 1985, Belgian studio project Shady Vision recorded "Just A Game" (Indisc DID 127754) which addressed the tragic event. Serious progress on legal banning orders preventing foreign travel to matches was arguably not made until the violence involving England fans (allegedly mainly involving neo-Nazi groups, such as Combat 18) at a match against Ireland on 15 February 1995 and violent scenes at the 1998 FIFA World Cup. Sixth-placed Everton were denied a Fair Play berth for 1996–97 by UEFA, as punishment for the FA due to Tottenham Hotspur and Wimbledon fielding weakened teams in the 1995 UEFA Intertoto Cup.[32]. We have got all the match results from 1892 to today along with great player profiles 1973-1985: The Golden Years No winners on night for weeping The Guardian match report A
Pauline Petit Instagram, Clavier Turc Iphone, Zoo De La Barben Plan, You Raise Me Up Partition Pdf, Hélicoptère Djinn Occasion, 7 Secrets Pour Changer De Vie Maintenant Pdf,