Argentina club fire kills at least 174 (Agencies) Updated: 2004-12-31 15:51
A fire swept through a crowded Buenos Aires nightclub during a rock concert,
killing at least 174 people and injuring more than 410 as young concert-goers
scrambled for the exits, officials said Friday.
The blaze broke out late Thursday and the building in the Argentine capital
quickly filled with smoke, setting off a stampede for the emergency exits,
witnesses said. Television images showed the bodies of youngsters curled up on
the sidewalk as bystanders and shirtless teenagers carried people out of the
smoldering building.
![People injured in a nightclub fire are helped outside the nightclub in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Friday, Dec. 31, 2004. The fire swept through the crowded nightclub, killing at least 174 people and injuring more than 410, police said Friday. The blaze broke out during a rock concert at a popular nightclub. [AP]](xin_221201311554591486813.jpg) People injured in a
nightclub fire are helped outside the nightclub in Buenos Aires,
Argentina, Friday, Dec. 31, 2004. The fire swept through the crowded
nightclub, killing at least 174 people and injuring more than 410, police
said Friday. The blaze broke out during a rock concert at a popular
nightclub. [AP] | "People were pushing and jumping
over each other trying to get out," one concert-goer, Jose Maria Godoy, told The
Associated Press. "It was like a human wave. As people fell down running for the
door, others just simply ran over them or pushed them down."
City officials said it wasn't immediately clear what caused the fire, but
several witnesses said they saw a flare hit a foam lining on the roof of the
concert hall, triggering a fire.
"Someone from the crowd tossed a flare and there were immediately flames,"
said Fabian Zamudeo, a 22-year-old in the crowd to see the Argentine rock band,
Los Callejeros.
"Parts of the roof started falling down in flames and people started running,
knocking over the speakers and light stands," he added. "People were choking on
smoke and I tried to push as many people out as I could."
Alfredo Stein, an official in the Buenos Aires health department, told
reporters at least 174 had been killed and more than 410 people injured.
Many of the dead died from smoke inhalation, said Mariano Tili, a Buenos
Aires city official helping in the rescue effort.
Hundreds of bystanders and relatives stood outside the building as rescue
workers carried the wounded away on stretchers. Others could be seen treating
the injured on the street in front of the Republica de la Cromagnon disco in the
Argentine capital, which is popular with teenagers.
Rescue workers turned a nearby parking lot into a temporary morgue, lining up
dozens of bodies as parents rushed to the club looking for their children.
![An injured man breathes with the help of an oxygen mask in an ambulance outside a nightclub in Buenos Aires, early December 31, 2004. [Reuters]](xin_0012013114021531392012.jpg) An injured man breathes with the help of an
oxygen mask in an ambulance outside a nightclub in Buenos Aires, early
December 31, 2004. [Reuters] | As firemen battled the flames, some kids — many dazed and covered in soot —
lingered outside the building after rushing out, shouting out the names of
friends, hoping to find them.
Streets outside the nightclub in downtown Buenos Aires were lined with stray
pairs of tennis shoes and strewn with blackened clothes — remains of a chaotic
scene that saw hordes of people pushing their way out of the building.
An unidentified youngster told the TodoNoticias television network that the
heavy smoke quickly filled up the concert hall.
"We could barely see there was so much smoke," he said. "People were kicking
the doors down trying to get out."
Argentine media reported as many 1,500 people were believed to have been in
the building at the time, with some saying the amount could be almost twice as
much.
The fire was the worst in South America since a blaze swept a Paraguayan
supermarket in August, killing 399 people in an Asuncion suburb. Authorities
later said the doors were ordered shut by the store's owners to prevent looting,
trapping people inside.
A nightclub fire in West Warwick, R.I., killed 100 people and injured
hundreds in February 2003. Authorities said the blaze began when sparks from a
band's pyrotechnics ignited highly flammable foam that was used in the club as
soundproofing.
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