Mallorca: German killed in Ballermann bar collapse

Majorca
German killed in Ballermann bar collapse

Rescue workers search the rubble. Photo

© Isaac Buj/EUROPA PRESS/dpa

The popular party mile became a place of horror within seconds: when a restaurant on Ballermann collapsed, two people from Germany died. There are fears that many more people will be injured.

Tragedy at Ballermann: When a fully occupied restaurant collapsed on Playa de Palma on Two German women and two other people have died in Mallorca. The German victims were aged 20 and 30, the police in Palma said. A 23-year-old Spanish woman and a 44-year-old man from Senegal were also killed in the accident on Thursday evening. The German victims are presumably holidaymakers, they said in response to an inquiry.

According to official information, 16 injured people were still being treated in various hospitals on the Mediterranean island, which is very popular with German holidaymakers, on Friday. Seven of the injured were in a critical condition. The remaining nine were all seriously injured, but not in danger of dying.

The head of the Palma fire brigade, Eder García, said on Friday night that most of those affected were foreigners “of various nationalities and middle-aged”. One of the women who died worked in the bar, wrote the newspaper “El País” and other media.

The disaster shook not only the Balearic Islands but the whole of Spain late in the evening. In Madrid, Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez expressed his condolences to the families of the victims on X, formerly Twitter, and stressed: “I am closely following the consequences of the terrible collapse on Palma beach.”

Overload of the first floor possible cause

The accident happened right on the beach, just a few streets away from the iconic Megapark and Bierkönig bars. The Medusa Beach Club building collapsed at around 8:30 p.m. The first floor collapsed immediately down to the basement, where many guests were having dinner, reported “El País” and other media, citing eyewitnesses. An initial investigation revealed that overloading of the first floor was a possible cause of the collapse, said fire chief García.

Early on Friday morning, emergency services were still frantically searching for victims under the rubble. However, a police spokesman gave good news shortly before midnight: “With 90 percent certainty” there were no more victims under the rubble, he said when asked by the German Press Agency. No further victims were recovered by Friday.

Javier, a resident of Playa de Palma, was nearby when the building on Cartago Street collapsed quickly like a house of cards but with a loud bang. “It sounded like a bomb,” he told a reporter from the regional newspaper Última Hora. Other people said the building had only been renovated “a few years ago.” The part on the first floor that collapsed had been used as a chill-out area.

Many guests in the restaurant at the time of the collapse

At the time of the collapse, many guests were in the restaurant, which also served as a cocktail bar with live music, media reported. Police, fire and Mallorcan emergency services were quickly on site. The neighboring bars and houses were evacuated due to the risk of collapse and the area was cordoned off. Psychologists and doctors were still at the scene of the accident, caring for the slightly injured, relatives of the victims and visibly shaken witnesses to the tragedy, hours after the collapse.

The regional newspapers “Diario de Mallorca” and “Última Hora” reported that up to 1,000 people had gathered in front of the accident site immediately after the collapse. Relatives of employees feared for their loved ones, onlookers debated the possible causes. The police had to repeatedly ask the crowd to be quiet so that the rescue teams could hear the voices of possible survivors under the rubble.

The regional minister-president Marga Prohens, the mayor of Palma, Jaime Martínez, and the first deputy mayor, Javier Bonet, also rushed to the beach to see the tragedy and the rescue work on site. Mayor Martínez declared three days of mourning.

After the start of the party season, numerous tourists have been returning to Playa de Palma since the end of April. Unlike visitors to the English party hotspot Magaluf west of Palma, the majority of them come from Germany.

dpa

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