
Deadly nightclub blaze leaves North Macedonia in grief and desperate for accountability
North Macedonia is grappling with the loss of dozens of young lives in a nightclub inferno while trying to hold those responsible to account and prevent another calamity.
Fire tore through the overcrowded Club Pulse early Sunday in the eastern town of Kocani, leaving 59 people dead and 155 injured from burns, smoke inhalation, and being trampled in the panicked escape toward the building's single exit.
Although the investigation into the fire's cause is ongoing, videos showed sparkling pyrotechnics on the stage hitting Club Pulse's ceiling and igniting the blaze as a band played. People as young as 16 were among the casualties, and the nation declared seven days of mourning.
'We are all in shock, and I am shocked myself: as a mother, as a person, as a president,' North Macedonian President Gordana Davkova Siljanovska said in an address to the nation Sunday night.
'I still cannot believe that the terrible tragedy in Kocani is a reality. I do not know with what words to express my condolences to the parents and loved ones of the deceased,' she said.
'No one responsible should escape the law, justice, and punishment! Let us not allow anyone to endanger the lives of innocent people anymore.'
The fire that shook the nation of 2 million–where close-knit extended family bonds made the disaster personal to many–was the latest in a string of deadly nightclub fires around the world. Authorities say they are investigating allegations of bribery surrounding the nightclub that was crammed with young revelers and at double capacity. And North Macedonia's government ordered a sweeping three-day inspection to be carried out at all nightclubs and cabarets across the country starting Monday.
The country was in mourning as people watched harrowing scenes in the town of 25,000 people, where rescuers for hours carried out their grim task of removing the charred bodies of clubgoers.
The fire caused the roof of the single-story building to partially collapse, revealing the charred remains of wooden beams and debris. Anxious parents gathered outside hospitals in Kocani and the capital, Skopje, some 115 kilometers (72 miles) west, for updates about the injured.
Waiting outside the hospital in Kocani, Dragi Stojanov was among those who received the dreaded news that his 21-year-old son, Tomce, had perished.
'He was my only child. I don't need my life anymore. … 150 families have been devastated,' he told reporters.
'Children burnt beyond recognition. There are corpses, just corpses, inside (the club). … And the bosses (of organized crime) just putting money into their pockets.'
Flags around the country have been lowered to half-staff, and the death toll may rise further, with 20 of the injured in critical condition, Health Minister Arben Taravari said.
Neighboring and nearby countries–Greece, Bulgaria, Serbia, and Turkey–have already accepted many of those with the most serious injuries, while the government was in talks with several other countries to expand the hospital transfers, officials said.
'All patients who have been transferred abroad are currently in stable condition. We hope it stays that way and that we will receive positive news from abroad,' Taravari said Monday, noting that several countries are also sending medical teams to North Macedonia.
'We even tried to get out through the bathroom, only to find bars (on the windows),' 19-year-old Marija Taseva told The Associated Press.
'I somehow managed to get out. I fell down the stairs, and they ran over me, trampled me. … I barely stayed alive and could hardly breathe.' She suffered an injury to her face.
A state prosecutor said a preliminary inspection of the nightclub had revealed numerous safety code violations, including a lack of emergency exits, an insufficient number of fire extinguishers, and improper access for emergency vehicles, among others.
Interior Minister Panche Toshkovski said 15 people had been detained for questioning after a preliminary inspection revealed the club was operating without a proper license. He said the number of people inside the club was at least double its official capacity of 250.
'We have grounds for suspicion that there is bribery and corruption in this case,' he told reporters, without elaborating.
Condolences poured in from leaders around Europe, as well as from the office of the hospitalized Pope Francis.
'I have had many difficult moments and challenges in my life, but today is by far the most difficult day of my life,' Prime Minister Hristijan Mickoski said in a televised address.
'My heart is breaking, and I have no strength to speak today. I am broken, and my spirit is broken.'
Late Sunday, Kocani's residents held a candlelight vigil in support for mourning families waiting in long lines to light church candles.
Beti Delovska, an economist from Skopje, said North Macedonia has never experienced a tragedy like this, with dozens of young people vanishing in minutes. And she noted that many young people with bright futures had already left the nation in search of opportunities elsewhere.
'(North) Macedonia is on its death bed,' Delovska said. 'We have no more credible institutions, the health system is completely dismantled, education is poor, judiciary is partisan and corrupted to the bone. … I do believe now that only God can save (North) Macedonia.'

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Al Arabiya
17-03-2025
- Al Arabiya
Deadly nightclub blaze leaves North Macedonia in grief and desperate for accountability
North Macedonia is grappling with the loss of dozens of young lives in a nightclub inferno while trying to hold those responsible to account and prevent another calamity. Fire tore through the overcrowded Club Pulse early Sunday in the eastern town of Kocani, leaving 59 people dead and 155 injured from burns, smoke inhalation, and being trampled in the panicked escape toward the building's single exit. Although the investigation into the fire's cause is ongoing, videos showed sparkling pyrotechnics on the stage hitting Club Pulse's ceiling and igniting the blaze as a band played. People as young as 16 were among the casualties, and the nation declared seven days of mourning. 'We are all in shock, and I am shocked myself: as a mother, as a person, as a president,' North Macedonian President Gordana Davkova Siljanovska said in an address to the nation Sunday night. 'I still cannot believe that the terrible tragedy in Kocani is a reality. I do not know with what words to express my condolences to the parents and loved ones of the deceased,' she said. 'No one responsible should escape the law, justice, and punishment! Let us not allow anyone to endanger the lives of innocent people anymore.' The fire that shook the nation of 2 million–where close-knit extended family bonds made the disaster personal to many–was the latest in a string of deadly nightclub fires around the world. Authorities say they are investigating allegations of bribery surrounding the nightclub that was crammed with young revelers and at double capacity. And North Macedonia's government ordered a sweeping three-day inspection to be carried out at all nightclubs and cabarets across the country starting Monday. The country was in mourning as people watched harrowing scenes in the town of 25,000 people, where rescuers for hours carried out their grim task of removing the charred bodies of clubgoers. The fire caused the roof of the single-story building to partially collapse, revealing the charred remains of wooden beams and debris. Anxious parents gathered outside hospitals in Kocani and the capital, Skopje, some 115 kilometers (72 miles) west, for updates about the injured. Waiting outside the hospital in Kocani, Dragi Stojanov was among those who received the dreaded news that his 21-year-old son, Tomce, had perished. 'He was my only child. I don't need my life anymore. … 150 families have been devastated,' he told reporters. 'Children burnt beyond recognition. There are corpses, just corpses, inside (the club). … And the bosses (of organized crime) just putting money into their pockets.' Flags around the country have been lowered to half-staff, and the death toll may rise further, with 20 of the injured in critical condition, Health Minister Arben Taravari said. Neighboring and nearby countries–Greece, Bulgaria, Serbia, and Turkey–have already accepted many of those with the most serious injuries, while the government was in talks with several other countries to expand the hospital transfers, officials said. 'All patients who have been transferred abroad are currently in stable condition. We hope it stays that way and that we will receive positive news from abroad,' Taravari said Monday, noting that several countries are also sending medical teams to North Macedonia. 'We even tried to get out through the bathroom, only to find bars (on the windows),' 19-year-old Marija Taseva told The Associated Press. 'I somehow managed to get out. I fell down the stairs, and they ran over me, trampled me. … I barely stayed alive and could hardly breathe.' She suffered an injury to her face. A state prosecutor said a preliminary inspection of the nightclub had revealed numerous safety code violations, including a lack of emergency exits, an insufficient number of fire extinguishers, and improper access for emergency vehicles, among others. Interior Minister Panche Toshkovski said 15 people had been detained for questioning after a preliminary inspection revealed the club was operating without a proper license. He said the number of people inside the club was at least double its official capacity of 250. 'We have grounds for suspicion that there is bribery and corruption in this case,' he told reporters, without elaborating. Condolences poured in from leaders around Europe, as well as from the office of the hospitalized Pope Francis. 'I have had many difficult moments and challenges in my life, but today is by far the most difficult day of my life,' Prime Minister Hristijan Mickoski said in a televised address. 'My heart is breaking, and I have no strength to speak today. I am broken, and my spirit is broken.' Late Sunday, Kocani's residents held a candlelight vigil in support for mourning families waiting in long lines to light church candles. Beti Delovska, an economist from Skopje, said North Macedonia has never experienced a tragedy like this, with dozens of young people vanishing in minutes. And she noted that many young people with bright futures had already left the nation in search of opportunities elsewhere. '(North) Macedonia is on its death bed,' Delovska said. 'We have no more credible institutions, the health system is completely dismantled, education is poor, judiciary is partisan and corrupted to the bone. … I do believe now that only God can save (North) Macedonia.'


Saudi Gazette
17-03-2025
- Saudi Gazette
Ten detained after North Macedonia nightclub fire kills 59
KOCANI — Police have detained 10 people after a fire at a nightclub in North Macedonia killed at least 59 people, officials have told the BBC. The blaze broke out around 02:30 local time (01:30 GMT) on Sunday at the Pulse club in Kocani, where about 500 people had gathered for a concert by DNK, a popular hip-hop duo in the country. Only one member of the band survived and was being treated in hospital, a spokesman for the public prosecutor's office told the BBC's Newshour. In total, 155 were injured at the concert. Biljana Arsovska said short-term detentions had been issued for 10 suspects believed to be responsible for the fire — including "officials from the ministries which gave out this license". Interior Minister Pance Toskovski said on Sunday afternoon the venue did not have a legal licence to operate, while police are looking into whether bribery and corruption were linked to the fire. The venue, in a town around 100km (60 miles) east of the capital, Skopje, has been described as an "improvised nightclub" in the local press, having previously been a carpet warehouse. Ms Arsovska said there had been only "one efficient exit" in the building, as the venue's back door was locked and could not be used. The first on-site inspections on Sunday also showed several "abnormalities" in the venue. "There are deficiencies in the system for fire-extinguishing and the system for lightning," she said. Citing initial reports, Toskovski said the fire had been started by sparks from pyrotechnic devices that had hit the ceiling, which was made of highly flammable material. Footage shows the band — which formed in 2002 and has topped the North Macedonian charts over the past decade — playing on stage when two flares go off, after which sparks catch fire on the ceiling before spreading rapidly. Video verified by the BBC shows people trying to extinguish the flames on the ceiling. The footage shows the club was still full and some people appeared to be watching efforts to put out the fire rather than leaving. Reports suggest the fact there was only a single entry and exit point to the improvised nightclub caused panic. Marija Taseva, 20, told Channel 5 TV she was caught in a crush at the club as people rushed for the exits. She recalled falling to the ground and being trampled during the chaos before managing to get out. "I don't know how, but somehow I managed to get out," she told the Reuters news agency. "I'm fine now, but there are many dead." She added that her 25-year-old sister - who her family had previously been searching for - had died, saying: "I was saved and she wasn't." Red Cross volunteer Mustafa Saidov said most of those affected were young people aged 18 to 20. Officials say more than 20 of the injured and three of those killed were under 18. "The situation is brutal, chaotic, the stories are very sad, and unfortunately many young lives are lost," Mr Saidov added. Dr Vladislav Gruev, a specialist in reconstructive and plastic surgery at the University Clinic for Surgical Diseases in the capital, told the BBC most of the patients being treated at his hospital arrived with extensive burns. "[They have] second and third degree burns in the head, neck and upper torso," he said. Kocani's hospital director earlier said that staff had initially been struggling to identify patients due to a lack of ID cards. Eighteen patients were assessed as being in a critical condition. Prime Minister Hristijan Mickoski called it a "difficult and very sad day" for the country, which had lost many "young lives". The government has declared seven days of national mourning, and the government is holding an emergency session as part of ongoing investigations on how the incident unfolded. North Macedonia's President, Gordana Siljanovska-Davkova, said she was shocked "as a mother, as a person, as a president". Addressing the bereaved directly, she added: "Your immense pain is mine too." "No business or activity can function without standards and rules," she wrote in a statement. "Let us not allow anyone to endanger the lives of innocent people again." Siljanovska-Davkova added that the most seriously injured were being taken to receive treatment in specialist clinics in Bulgaria, Greece, Serbia and Turkey. European leaders have voiced their condolences, with European Commission President Ursula Von Der Leyen saying the EU "stands in solidarity with the people of North Macedonia in this difficult time". Neighboring Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic called it "a tragedy of immense magnitude", adding that fears remain as "many more people will not be able to withstand the level of injuries they have at this moment". — BBC


Arab News
16-03-2025
- Arab News
59 dead in North Macedonia nightclub fire
SKOPJE: A fire tore through a nightclub in North Macedonia early Sunday, killing 59 people, apparently after on-stage fireworks set the place ablaze, authorities said, announcing arrest warrants for four people. They said 155 injured people had been taken to hospitals across the country, 18 of them in critical condition. Some of the serious cases were to be taken to other European countries for treatment. The blaze started in the Club Pulse in the eastern town of Kocani, as the place was packed with more than 1,000 mostly young fans attending a concert by a popular hip-hop duo called DNK. 'Initially we didn't believe there was a fire. Then there was huge panic in the crowd and a stampede to get out,' one young woman told local media outside a hospital in the capital Skopje. Fire crews and paramedics responded quickly and 'tried to resuscitate people ... but it wasn't enough,' said the woman, who was waiting outside for one of her friends, who was being treated for burns to his hand. The fire was probably caused by the use of pyrotechnic devices 'used for light effects at the concert,' said Interior Minister Pance Toskovski, who visited the scene with Prime Minister Hristijan Mickoski. 'Sparks caught the ceiling, which was made of easily flammable material, after which the fire rapidly spread across the whole discotheque, creating thick smoke,' Toskovski said. The Interior Ministry announced that arrest warrants had been issued for four people in relation to the tragedy, and a criminal investigation opened. 'There are 59 persons deceased of which 35 are identified. Of the identified, 31 persons are from Kocani and four from Stip,' Toskovski said. 'The number of wounded, according to latest information up to noon, is 155 persons who are in hospitals across the country,' Toskovski said. 'Preparations are being made to transport people seriously injured in the fire in Kocani to top hospitals in several European countries,' the head of North Macedonia's Crisis Center, Stojanche Angelov, said. The head of the Kocani hospital, Kristina Serafimovska, told media that the patients being treated there were aged between 14 and 25. 'Seventy of the patients have burns and carbon monoxide poisoning,' she said. One of the members of the DNK duo that had performed, Vladimir Blazev, had burns to his face and needed assistance breathing, his sister told local media outlets. 'This is a difficult and very sad day' for the country, Mickoski wrote on his Facebook account. 'The loss of so many young lives is irreparable, and the grief of their families, their loved ones and their friends is immeasurable,' he said.