Police forensic investigators sifted through the charred remains of an upscale Bangkok nightclub yesterday, seeking clues to a blaze that killed 58 revelers ringing in the New Year and injured 223.
Relatives and friends gathered at Bangkok hospitals and outside the popular nightspot desperate for news of loved ones lost or injured in the inferno that gutted the two-story building.
Police said a Singaporean national was among the dead and scores of other foreigners — some from Australia, France and Japan — were hospitalized.
PHOTO: AP
The blaze apparently broke out after a firework display at the Santika club in the Thai capital’s Ekkamai district, a thronging entertainment hub that is frequented by locals and tourists.
“It appears that the fire started from the area of the stage where a band was playing. There were some pyrotechnics and it appears that they started the blaze,” Police Lieutenant Colonel Prawit Kantwol said.
“Most of the victims died from suffocation, but some were also killed in a stampede when people were trying to get out,” he said.
A correspondent said 100 people gathered outside the cordoned-off nightclub, while inside abandoned shoes and broken bottles littered the floor, testament to the panic inside hours earlier.
“I heard that the electricity went out, so they couldn’t find the exit signs to get out,” said Ash Sutton from Australia, who was awaiting news of a friend who was in the club when the fire broke out. “It’s horrible, horrible ... I couldn’t understand why so many people were killed. They must have been trapped upstairs.”
Police Colonel Sutin Sapmuang, of the local police station, said 58 people were so far confirmed to have died in the blaze, which he said was still under investigation.
A Bangkok emergency services headquarters official said 223 people had been injured and had been rushed to 19 hospitals across the capital suffering from burns and smoke inhalation.
“Up until now, there are 223 people injured including 29 foreigners. The injured foreigners include French, Australians, Swiss, Japanese and Finnish,” the official said.
Japan’s Kyodo news agency, citing the Japanese embassy, said four Japanese nationals were injured, one seriously.
Almost all the dead were on the ground floor, where the stage was located. About 30 charred bodies were still inside the blackened, partially collapsed structure hours after the inferno.
The club, popular with Bangkok’s elite, has a capacity of 1,000 people but it was not clear how many were in there at the time of the blaze.
Fire brigade officials said the death toll was high because there were few exits from the building and because windows on the upper floors had iron bars across them.
“There was only one main way to get out from the front. People who worked there were able to escape from the back because they knew the exits, but the others had no chance,” senior fireman Wacharatpong Sri-Saard said.
Some victims were trapped in the basement of the club, which was accessible via a narrow stairwell, he said.
Police said the fire broke out between midnight and 1am, shortly after revelers had celebrated the coming of the New Year.
A billboard advertising the club’s New Year’s party, with the logo “Goodbye Santika” and the names of DJs playing at the event, was still on show on the street outside hours after the blaze.
The fire was the latest in a series of deadly blazes at nightclubs around the world in recent years.
In 2003 a pyrotechnics display during a concert at the Station nightclub in Rhode Island in the US set off a blaze that killed 100 people.
Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) is to visit Russia next month for a summit of the BRICS bloc of developing economies, Chinese Minister of Foreign Affairs Wang Yi (王毅) said on Thursday, a move that comes as Moscow and Beijing seek to counter the West’s global influence. Xi’s visit to Russia would be his second since the Kremlin sent troops into Ukraine in February 2022. China claims to take a neutral position in the conflict, but it has backed the Kremlin’s contentions that Russia’s action was provoked by the West, and it continues to supply key components needed by Moscow for
Japan scrambled fighter jets after Russian aircraft flew around the archipelago for the first time in five years, Tokyo said yesterday. From Thursday morning to afternoon, the Russian Tu-142 aircraft flew from the sea between Japan and South Korea toward the southern Okinawa region, the Japanese Ministry of Defense said in a statement. They then traveled north over the Pacific Ocean and finished their journey off the northern island of Hokkaido, it added. The planes did not enter Japanese airspace, but flew over an area subject to a territorial dispute between Japan and Russia, a ministry official said. “In response, we mobilized Air Self-Defense
CRITICISM: ‘One has to choose the lesser of two evils,’ Pope Francis said, as he criticized Trump’s anti-immigrant policies and Harris’ pro-choice position Pope Francis on Friday accused both former US president Donald Trump and US Vice President Kamala Harris of being “against life” as he returned to Rome from a 12-day tour of the Asia-Pacific region. The 87-year-old pontiff’s comments on the US presidential hopefuls came as he defied health concerns to connect with believers from the jungle of Papua New Guinea to the skyscrapers of Singapore. It was Francis’ longest trip in duration and distance since becoming head of the world’s nearly 1.4 billion Roman Catholics more than 11 years ago. Despite the marathon visit, he held a long and spirited
The pitch is a classic: A young celebrity with no climbing experience spends a year in hard training and scales Mount Everest, succeeding against some — if not all — odds. French YouTuber Ines Benazzouz, known as Inoxtag, brought the story to life with a two-hour-plus documentary about his year preparing for the ultimate challenge. The film, titled Kaizen, proved a smash hit on its release last weekend. Young fans queued around the block to get into a preview screening in Paris, with Inoxtag’s management on Monday saying the film had smashed the box office record for a special cinema