11 in Indonesia landslides
At least 245 people were killed in a nightclub fire in southern
Brazil yesterday after a band’s pyrotechnics show set the building
ablaze, and fleeing patrons were unable to find the emergency exits,
local officials said. Bodies were still being removed from the Kiss
nightclub in the southern city of Santa Maria, Major Gerson da Rosa
Ferreira, who was leading rescue efforts at the scene for the military
police, told Reuters as at press time.
Local officials said 180 people were confirmed dead, and Ferreira
said the death toll would rise above 245. He said the victims died of
asphyxiation or from being trampled, and that there were possibly as
many as 500 people inside the club when the fire broke out at about 2:30
a.m. Television footage showed people sobbing outside the club, while
shirtless firefighters used sledge hammers and axes to knock down an
exterior wall to open up an exit. “It was really fast. There was a lot
of smoke, really dark smoke,” survivor Aline Santos Silva, 29, told
Globonews TV.
“We were only able to get out quickly because we were in a VIP area
close to the door.” Meanwhile, at least 11 people have died and several
others have been injured in two separate landslides in western
Indonesia, officials have said. In Agam district, in West Sumatra
province, 15 houses were buried beneath mud and rocks, killing seven.
Hundreds of people were forced to flee their homes on the mountainside.
In the neighbouring province of Jambi, heavy rain triggered a landslide
in a drilling field owned by a state-run energy company. In a statement,
PT Pertamina Geothermal Energy said that four of its workers had died,
one remained missing and five had been injured.
Sixty workers survived the landslide, the firm said. Brazilian
President Dilma Rousseff cut short a visit to Chile and was returning to
Brazil following the blaze, her spokesperson said. Luiza Sousa, a civil
police official in Santa Maria, told Reuters the blaze started when a
member of the band or its production team ignited a flare, which then
set fire to the ceiling. The fire spread “in seconds,” Sousa said.
The disaster recalls other incidents including a 2003 fire at a
nightclub in West Warwick, Rhode Island, that killed 100, and a Buenos
Aires nightclub blaze in 2004 that killed nearly 200. In both incidents,
a band or members of the audience ignited fires that set the
establishment ablaze. Brazil’s safety standards and emergency response
capabilities are under particular scrutiny as the country prepares to
host the 2014 World Cup soccer tournament and the 2016 Summer Olympics.
Rio Grande do Sul state Health Secretary Ciro Simoni said emergency
medical supplies from all over the state were being sent to the scene.
Santa Maria is some 186 miles west of the state capital of Porto Alegre.
“A sad Sunday!” tweeted Rio Grande do Sul Governor Tarso Genro. He
said “all possible measures” were being taken in response and that he
was on his way to the scene.
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