At least 13 people were killed in a fire in a Spanish nightclub on Sunday morning, authorities said, with fears the toll could still rise as rescue workers sift through the debris.
The fire broke out in the two-storey Teatre nightclub, also called Fonda Milagros, in the city of Murcia in southeastern Spain in the early hours of the morning.
The emergency services said on X, formerly known as Twitter, that firefighters were continuing to work at the scene and had not ruled out “the possibility of finding more victims”.
José Ballesta, the mayor of Murcia, said the fire had broken out at about 6am local time (4am GMT) and was “extremely serious”.
He told press at the scene that “there are still bodies to be pulled out” from the rubble, which he said was a complicated task given the risk of collapse.
Firefighters dispatched to the scene at 7am were able to extinguish the fire by 8am, he said.
Photos released by the emergency services show water hoses from fire trucks spraying the blackened facade of the club. Thick smoke could be seen billowing from the roof of the building.
Authorities said four people were injured – two women aged 22 and 25 and two men in their forties – all suffering with smoke inhalation.
Diego Seral, the national police spokeperson, said that a birthday party was being held at the club on Saturday night.
“According to initial information, the fire broke out on the first floor,” he told the radio station Onda Regional de Murcia.
Forensic and judicial police experts had been deployed to the nightclub to investigate the cause, the national police service said on X.
Video footage released by the city’s firefighting brigade shows the firefighters holding a long hose approaching flames inside the venue, passing bar tables that still have drinks placed on them.
More than 40 firefighters and 12 emergency vehicles were attending the scene, authorities said.
Pedro Sánchez, the prime minister of Spain, voiced “solidarity with the victims and relatives of the tragic fire in a Murcia nightclub”.
The city’s town hall said it “deeply regrets” the accident and offered condolences to those affected.
The mayor announced that three days of mourning would be held, and set up a reception base for the relatives of victims.
Forty people were injured in 2017 in a packed nightclub on Spain’s holiday island of Tenerife when a floor collapsed.
And in 1990, 43 people died in a fire at a nightclub in Spain’s northeastern city of Zaragoza.
2023-10-01 08:37:02
Article from www.theguardian.com
rnrn