Santa Maria, Feb 9 : Penny-pinching by a band known for its onstage pyrotechnic displays
may have cost more than 230 people their lives at a nightclub in southern
Brazil, according to a police inspector leading the investigation into this
weekend's deadly blaze.
Inspector Marcelo Arigony told reporters at a
news conference that members of the band knowingly purchased flares meant for
outdoor use because they cost a mere $1.25 a piece, compared with the $35 price
tag for an indoor flare.
"The flare lit was for outdoor use only, and the
people who lit them know that," said Arigony, adding that members of the group
acknowledged regularly opting for the less expensive flares. "They chose to buy
those because they were cheaper than those that can be used
indoors."
Arigony, whose cousin died in the fire, added: "The
pyrotechnics were part of their show — the guys even wore gloves onstage so they
wouldn't burn their hands."
The repercussions of the band's choice to use
flares continued to send shock waves through Santa Maria, a college town of
260,000 people that's been stunned by the tragedy in the Kiss
nightclub.
The Rio Grande do Sul state forensics department raised the
death toll from 231 to 234 to account for three victims who did not appear on
the original list of the dead. Authorities say more than 120 people remain
hospitalized for smoke inhalation and burns, with dozens of them in critical
condition.
The blaze began at around 2:30 am local time, during a
performance by Gurizada Fandangueira, a country music band that had made the use
of pyrotechnics a trademark of their shows. The band's guitarist told media that
the 615 square-meter (6,650-square-foot) club was packed with an estimated 1,200
to 1,300 people. The police have said the capacity for a club of that size is
under 700 people.
Police said the club's ceiling was covered with
insulating foam made from a combustible material that appeared to have ignited
after it came in contact with a spark from a flare lit during the
performance.
After the fire extinguisher malfunctioned, the blaze spread
throughout the packed club at lightning speed, emitting a thick, toxic smoke.
Because Kiss apparently had neither an alarm nor a sprinkler system and only one
working exit, the crowd was left to search desperately for a way
out.
About 50 of the victims were found in the club's two bathrooms,
where the blinding smoke caused them to believe the doors were
exits.
Police investigator Arigony said people headed to the bathrooms
because the only lights in the dark club were coming from there, and the patrons
mistook them for exits. The foam, which emitted a toxic gas, was not proper
soundproofing equipment and was likely only used to cut down on the echo inside
the club, Arigony said.
He added that a full analysis of the foam was
ongoing. The malfunctioning fire extinguisher was not legal, he said, and the
club's operating license had expired in August.
"There were diverse
irregularities," Arigony said. "Any child could have seen that this
establishment should not have been open."
Outraged locals, mostly young
people like those who died in the blaze, marched through Santa Maria to demand
justice for the dead, an unusual move in a country where public protests are
rare. The demonstration interrupted the police news conference, even as Arigony
pledged to investigate everyone involved in the tragedy — including the
authorities charged with making sure such establishments are up to code, such as
firefighters and city officials.
"There could have been an administrative
failure in the mayor's office or with the firefighters," he said. "We have no
proof, but we will investigate, we will look into everything."
No charges
have been filed. Under Brazilian law, prosecutors can only file charges after
police complete their investigation, which in this case could take 30 days.
Prosecutors have said manslaughter charges could be filed.
The fire
inspired nationwide action, and several mayors said they would crack down on
nightclubs and other venues in their cities.
The government of the
country's biggest city, Sao Paulo, promised tougher security regulations for
nightclubs and other places where many people gather. The mayor of the city of
Americana, Sao Paulo state, ordered the temporary shutdown of 10 of the city's
nightclubs. Mayor Diego de Nadai suspended the operating permits of the
nightclubs pending inspections into the fire and accident prevention measures in
place, local media reported.
The Folha de S. Paulo newspaper reported
that in Manaus, nightclubs with empty fire extinguishers and unmarked emergency
exits have been shut down and fined. And in Rio de Janeiro, a consumer complaint
hotline has received more than 60 calls since the tragedy denouncing hazardous
conditions at night spots, theaters, supermarkets, schools, hospitals and
shopping malls around the state. Blocked emergency exits and nonexistent fire
alarms and extinguishers top the list of most common complaints.
Brazil's
O Globo newspaper reported on its website that the mayor's office in Santa Maria
ordered all nightclubs closed for 30 days while inspections are carried out. In
Brasilia, the nation's capital, lawmakers in the lower house worked on a
proposal that would require federal safety minimum standards across Brazil —
now, states individually create such laws.
Investigator Arigony said
police searched two other Santa Maria nightspots owned by Mauro Hoffmann, one of
the partners of the Kiss nightclub, for evidence that could help shed light on
the investigation.
Police said earlier that computers that had stored
footage from security cameras inside the club were missing — but Arigony said
police had found them at a computer repair shop, where they were dropped off a
week ago, meaning images from the disaster would not be on them. Owners of the
club told police the security cameras hadn't worked in months.
Both
owners of the club were provisionally detained, along with two of the band
members. A judge froze the assets of the club's owners, pending the
investigation.
The fire appeared to mark a possible turning point for a
country that has long turned a blind eye to safety and infrastructure concerns.
The disaster, the worst fire of its kind in more than a decade, has also raised
questions of whether Brazilian authorities are up to the task of ensuring safety
in such venues as the country prepares to host next year's World Cup and the
2016 Olympics.
O Globo published an editorial saying it was time for
action.
"The tragedy in Santa Maria forces us to seriously reflect over
our national culture of leniency, contempt and corruption," it said. "We must
start from the principle that the mea culpa belongs to us all: public servants,
owners of establishments that disregard safety regulations, and regular citizens
who flout them."
Soccer legend Pele, too, urged the Brazilian government
to "make safety and security a priority in this country."
"So many young
people are no longer with us, they had entire lives ahead of them. I ask God to
protect them and take care of their families," he wrote on
Twitter.
According to state safety codes here, clubs should have one fire
extinguisher every 1,500 square feet as well as multiple emergency exits. Limits
on the number of people admitted are to be strictly respected. None of that
appears to have happened at the Santa Maria nightclub.
Rodrigo Martins, a
guitarist for the group playing that night, told Globo TV network in an
interview that the flames broke out minutes after the employment of a
pyrotechnic machine that fans out colored sparks.
"I thought I was going
to die there," Martins said. "There was nothing I could do, with the fire
spreading and people screaming in front."
Most of the dead were college
students 18 to 21 years old, but they also included some minors. Almost all died
from smoke inhalation rather than burns.
The blaze was the deadliest in
Brazil since at least 1961, when a fire that swept through a circus killed 503
people in Niteroi, Rio de Janeiro.
The fire also appeared to be the worst
at a nightclub anywhere in the world since December 2000, when a welding
accident reportedly set off a fire at a club in Luoyang, China, killing 309
people.
Ends
SA/EN
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Brazil police: Outdoor flare started club fire
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