logo
Dominican Republic ends search for survivors after nightclub roof collapse

Dominican Republic ends search for survivors after nightclub roof collapse

The Guardian10-04-2025
Rescue workers in the Dominican Republic on Wednesday ended the search for survivors of a nightclub roof collapse as the death toll surpassed 180 in the Caribbean nation's worst disaster in decades.
Emergency personnel late Wednesday reported 60 more deaths compared to the morning's count, with the total confirmed tally reaching 184.
An official statement had earlier said that 'all reasonable possibilities of finding more survivors' had been exhausted, and the focus of the operation will turn to recovering bodies.
'Today we will complete the rescue effort,' said Jose Luis Frometa Herasme, head of the fire service in the Dominican capital Santo Domingo, where the tragedy occurred at the Jet Set nightclub in the early hours of Tuesday, sending shock waves through the nation.
Relatives of missing people were still waiting desperately for news Wednesday of their loved ones outside the ruined club, at hospitals and at the local morgue.
Over 300 rescue workers, aided by sniffer dogs, had spent two days combing through mounds of fallen bricks, steel bars and tin sheets, supported by firefighters from Puerto Rico and Israel.
Aerial images of the site showed a scene resembling the aftermath of an earthquake, with a gaping hole where the roof of the club – a fixture of Santo Domingo's nightlife for half a century – had been.
Over 500 people were also injured when the roof caved in while renowned merengue singer Rubby Pérez was performing for a crowd of hundreds.
Pérez and two former Major League Baseball players were among the dead.
Antonio Hernandez, whose son worked at the Jet Set nightclub, told AFP his hopes of finding his son alive had begun fading as he watched more and more bodies, but no survivors, being retrieved.
The remains in one body bag resembled his son's height and build, said Hernandez, but he did not investigate. 'I don't have the stomach to find out the worst yet.'
Mercedes Lopez said she was in a lot of pain as she waited to learn the fate of her son. 'We haven't found him on the lists or in the hospitals,' she said.
US secretary of state Marco Rubio sent his condolences Wednesday and said at least one US citizen was among the victims. 'Our hearts go out to the families and loved ones affected by this devastating event,' he wrote on X.
Pope Francis also sent condolences.
Local media said there were between 500 and 1,000 people in the club when disaster struck about 12.44am local time Tuesday. The club can hold 1,700 people.
A video posted on social media showed the venue suddenly plunged into darkness while Pérez was singing.
The star's daughter Zulinka managed to escape but her father did not. His body was recovered on Wednesday.
Tributes to the singer, known for hits such as Volvere and Enamorado de Ella poured in from across Latin America. 'Maestro, what a great pain you leave us,' Puerto Rican Grammy-winning singer Olga Tanon wrote on social media. Pérez's former band leader Wilfrido Vargas said he was 'devastated' at the death of an 'idol of our genre'.
The baseball world meanwhile mourned the death of Octavio Dotel, a 51-year-old baseball pitcher who won the World Series with the St Louis Cardinals in 2011 and Tony Blanco, 45, who also played in the United States.
President Luis Abinader declared three days of national mourning.
Iris Pena, a survivor, told local television that she made for the door after 'dirt started falling like dust' into her drink and then a stone fell and cracked the table where she was sitting. 'The impact was so strong, as if it had been a tsunami or an earthquake,' she said.
The Jet Set club said on Tuesday it was working with authorities probing the disaster, one of the worst in Dominican history.
In 2005, more than 130 prisoners in the east of the country died in a fire caused by a fight between inmates.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Man, 24, arrested for multiple murders after 4 bodies pulled from Seine in Paris… as ID of 3 victims remains mystery
Man, 24, arrested for multiple murders after 4 bodies pulled from Seine in Paris… as ID of 3 victims remains mystery

Scottish Sun

time7 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Man, 24, arrested for multiple murders after 4 bodies pulled from Seine in Paris… as ID of 3 victims remains mystery

Two of the bodies showed signs they suffered 'violent injuries' PARIS 'MURDERS' Man, 24, arrested for multiple murders after 4 bodies pulled from Seine in Paris… as ID of 3 victims remains mystery Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A SUSPECT has been arrested in connection with four bodies which were found mysteriously floating in the River Seine in Paris last week. It comes after a horrified train passenger spotted a corpse in the water before police rushed to the scene and found another three bodies. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 2 The area in Choisy-le-Roi on the outskirts of Paris where police pulled out four bodies on August 13 2 A suspect has been arrested after four bodies were found by cops in the River Seine (stock) Credit: AFP A 24-year-old Algerian man has now been taken into custody and accused of committing several murders. Créteil prosecutor's office told Le Monde: "A man was taken into custody this morning on suspicion for multiple murders at the headquarters of the criminal brigade of the Paris judicial police." The bodies were found in the French capital on August 13 in Choisy-le-Roi. One of the victims died from strangulation while another had suffered "violent injuries", the local prosecutor said on Saturday. It is currently unclear how many of the four victims the man is accused of killing. The first body which was reportedly submerged for a shorter time than the others was identified as a man aged around 40 who lived in the local area. His corpse showed signs of "violent injuries", before another investigation was opened into a second body. The suspect is now set to face questioning during his arrest over the four dead bodies. He was taken in custody on Wednesday morning, Le Parisien reported. The arrest marks a breakthrough development in what is an incredibly mysterious ordeal. Tragedy as two women die hours apart after being pulled from the sea at nearby popular UK beaches While the body pointed out by the bystander was "relatively well-preserved," the other three were in "a very advanced state of decomposition" when they were recovered, the prosecutor said on Saturday. One of the three unidentified bodies also showed signs of violence, just like the first body which was found. Cops were joined by river brigade authorities who scrambled to bring the bodies out of the water last week. A source close to the investigation told Actu17: "There are three men of African descent and a fourth of North African descent." The witness reportedly sounded the alarm after making the gruesome discovery at around 1pm last Wednesday. Authorities made a series of chilling discoveries after responding to reports that one body had been spotted in the river. They reportedly found a second corpse around 50 metres away from the first one, then a third stuck in branches in the river, and then a fourth drifting with the current. Prosecutors have stressed there is so far no evidence of a link between the victims. They could have entered the water in separate places upstream and taken by the current to the foot of the Choisy bridge.

Woman 'threatened with rape and dragged to basement by police' in Serbia protest
Woman 'threatened with rape and dragged to basement by police' in Serbia protest

Metro

time11 hours ago

  • Metro

Woman 'threatened with rape and dragged to basement by police' in Serbia protest

To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video After almost a year of relatively peaceful demonstrations, Serbia nears a state of war. Protests by students, teachers, workers and government opposition began last December after 16 people were killed on November 1 when the canopy of the main railway station in Novi Sad collapsed on them. The tragedy was viewed as a consequence of deep-rooted corruption and institutional failure in the Balkan nation, leading to calls for early elections. Since then, the persistent dissent has escalated into the most severe crisis since the Serbian Progressive Party (SNS) and Aleksandar Vučić came into power. As pressure mounts, Vučić – an authoritarian leader famous in the Balkans for his ties to Vladimir Putin – unleashed his loyalists and riot police on the streets to clash with the protesters. As many as 100 people have been detained over the past week, with many sharing their experiences of abuse of power. Nikolina Sindjelic, a student activist, told AFP she was threatened with rape while in custody. She accused Marko Krichak, the commander of the Unit for the Security of Certain Persons and Facilities (JZO), of sexually and physically abusing her. Sindjelic recalled being dragged along with another student and several other protesters into a government garage in central Belgrade by officers in a special police unit on Thursday night. The 22-year-old said: 'The commander of the unit brutally beat both him and me. 'He called us offensive names, told me I was a w***e and that he would rape me there in front of everyone, that I would regret trying to overthrow the state.' Her story was confirmed by several students who were also detained at the same time. The Serbian Ministry of Internal Affairs 'strongly denied' the allegations. It said the student was arrested for being part of a group that had attacked government buildings and police. A statement said: 'Throughout the entire procedure, no means of coercion, handcuffing, insults, or any form of mistreatment were applied.' Sindjelic, who was released with a misdemeanour charge, said she intends to sue over her alleged abuse. Hundreds gathered in front of the accused commander's police building in Belgrade on Tuesday in support of the woman. Protesters carried banners reading, 'Rapists with badges' and 'The system beats us, we defend ourselves'. Andrej Sevo, a 31-year-old protester, said: 'We are now entering a spiral of violence, and I do not see how it can end well if things continue in this way. 'They must decide how to act and calm the situation, rather than simply pouring fuel on the fire by sending in the police, with ever more brutal behaviour.' Aleksandra Krstic, 45, also at the rally, stressed that women are especially vulnerable to police abuse. The political science professor said: 'We have no one to protect us. 'If I go to a protest, I should be able to turn to the police… not be beaten, dragged into some basement of a government building, threatened with rape, and forced to beg them to stop.' Rallies have been held in Belgrade, Valjevo, Novi Sad, Zrenjanin, Prijepolje, Niš, Kragujevac, and other, smaller places across the country, with people gathering in large numbers. On Monday night, Vučić's SNS office in Valjevo had its windows smashed by a passing crowd. Within an hour, the leader stood in front of the shattered glass, flanked by pro-government media and security, to denounce the demonstrators as 'terrorists' – a familiar refrain for him. The 55-year-old warned that 'soon, the citizens will be freed from this terror and evil.' In Valjevo, thousands of people clashed with riot police, pelting them with rocks and glass bottles. More Trending Officers then unleashed multiple rounds of tear gas, striking people with their batons and hurling them to the ground. Similar clashes also took place in Belgrade and the northern city of Novi Sad. In response, Russia's Foreign Ministry has offered its support to the pro-Kremlin, right-wing president. It said in a statement that 'we cannot remain unresponsive to what is happening in brotherly Serbia'. Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@ For more stories like this, check our news page. MORE: Nerve-racking moment politician suffers a stroke during live TV interview

At least 71 Afghan refugees killed in huge bus crash after being deported by Iran
At least 71 Afghan refugees killed in huge bus crash after being deported by Iran

The Independent

time19 hours ago

  • The Independent

At least 71 Afghan refugees killed in huge bus crash after being deported by Iran

At least 71 people, including 17 children, have been killed in western Afghanistan after a bus carrying refugees deported from Iran burst into flames following a collision with a fuel truck. The accident happened on Tuesday night when the passenger bus was passing through Guzara district in Herat province. All the passengers on board the bus were Afghan nationals who were recently deported by Iran and were en route to the Afghan capital Kabul, the provincial governor's spokesperson Mohammad Yousuf Saeedi told AFP. Herat police said the accident was a result of the bus's "excessive speed and negligence' and only three passengers survived the crash. The bus crashed into a motorcycle and the truck – which was carrying fuel – leading to a fire. Two people who were in the truck and two others riding the motorcycle were also killed, police said. Visuals from the scene showed a bus engulfed in flames as firefighters tried to douse the fire. Later pictures showed the burnt shell of the bus and the charred remains of the truck and the motorcycle. A massive number of Afghan refugees have been deported by neighbouring countries Pakistan and Iran in recent years. According to the United Nation 's migration agency, more than 1 million Afghans are expected to return to Afghanistan from these two countries alone. For decades, refugees from Afghanistan's multiple conflicts have lived in border villages in neighbouring countries – more fled in 2021 after the takeover of Kabul by the Taliban. The UN said more than 1.5 million returned in 2025 alone and more than 4 million since September 2023. The UN's mission in Afghanistan has called on all countries to stop forcibly sending vulnerable Afghan nationals back to their homeland under the Taliban regime as it warned about the threat of arrest, torture and abuse these citizens face. Rights groups have voiced concern that their arrest and deportation would wreak havoc on their lives after their return to Afghanistan, which is facing challenges to integrate waves of returnees amid high rates of unemployment and poverty.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store