The French managers are suspected of negligent homicide, negligent bodily harm and causing fire by negligence, police said in a statement
Swiss prosecutors have opened an investigation into the managers of the bar where a fire at a New Year party left 40 people dead, police have said. More than 100 people were injured in the blaze that broke out about 1.30am on Thursday (January 1) at the Le Constellation bar in the Alpine resort town of Crans-Montana.
Investigators said on Friday (January 2) that they believe sparklers in Champagne bottles ignited the fatal fire when they came too close to the ceiling of the crowded bar. The bodies of two Swiss women aged 21 and 16, and two Swiss men aged 18 and 16 were the first to be identified and returned to their families, police said earlier.
The French managers of Le Constellation are suspected of having committed homicide by negligence, causing bodily harm by negligence and arson by negligence, the prosecutors’ office in the canton of Valais said in a statement on Saturday afternoon.
The process of identifying the dead and injured was still under way on Saturday, leading to an agonising wait for relatives desperate for news.
Many of the injured were in their teens to mid-20s, police said. Authorities planned to look into whether sound-dampening material on the ceiling conformed with regulations and whether the candles were permitted for use in the bar, the Associated Press reports.
Officials said they would also look at other safety measures on the premises, including fire extinguishers and escape routes. The region’s top prosecutor has warned of possible prosecutions if any criminal liability is found.
The Valais region’s top security official, Stephane Ganzer, told SRF public radio Saturday that “such a huge accident with a fire in Switzerland means that something didn’t work — maybe the material, maybe the organisation on the spot.”
He added: “Something didn’t work and someone made a mistake, I am sure of that.”
Nicolas Feraud, who heads the Crans-Montana municipality, told RTS radio he was “convinced” checks on the bar had not been lax, the broadcaster reported.
