Los Angeles Times

Death toll in Cuba hotel blast hits 22

Dozens, including kids, are injured in explosion after apparent gas leak

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HAVANA — A powerful explosion Friday, apparently caused by a gas leak, killed at least 22 people, including a pregnant woman and a child, and injured dozens when it blew away outer walls from a luxury hotel in the heart of Cuba’s capital.

No tourists were staying at the 96-room Hotel Saratoga in Havana because it was undergoing renovation­s, Havana Gov. Reinaldo García Zapata told the Communist Party newspaper Granma.

“It’s not a bomb or an attack. It is a tragic accident,” Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel, who visited the site, said on Twitter.

Díaz-Canel told reporters that 50 adults and 14 children were hospitaliz­ed after the blast. Dr. Julio Guerra Izquierdo, chief of hospital services at the Ministry of Health, said at least 74 people had been injured.

Díaz-Canel said families in nearby buildings that were affected by the explosion had been transferre­d to safer locations. An elementary school next to the hotel was evacuated; it was not clear if the injured children were students.

Cuban state TV reported that the blast was caused by a truck that had been supplying natural gas to the hotel; no details were provided as to how the gas ignited.

The blast sent smoke into the air around the hotel as people on the street stared in awe and cars sped away, video showed. It happened as Cuba is struggling to revive its crucial tourism sector, which was devastated by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Cuba’s national health minister, José Ángel Portal Miranda, told the Associated Press the number of injured could rise as the search continues for people who may be trapped in the rubble of the 19th century structure in the Old Havana neighborho­od.

“We are still looking for a large group of people,” Lt. Col. Noel Silva of the fire department said.

Police cordoned off the area as firefighte­rs and rescue workers toiled inside the wreckage of the hotel, about 110 yards from Cuba’s Capitol building.

The hotel, first renovated in 2005 as part of the Cuban government’s revival of Old Havana, is owned by the military’s tourism business arm, Grupo de Turismo Gaviota SA. The company said it was investigat­ing the cause of the blast and did not immediatel­y respond to an email seeking details about the hotel and the current renovation.

The Hotel Saratoga has been visited by political figures, including high-ranking U.S. government delegation­s, and celebritie­s. Beyoncé and Jay-Z stayed there in 2013.

Photograph­er Michel Figueroa said he was walking past the hotel when “the explosion threw me to the ground, and my head still hurts . ... Everything was very fast.”

Worried relatives of people who had been working at the hotel showed up at a hospital in the afternoon to look for them. Among them was Beatriz Céspedes Cobas, who was tearfully searching for her sister.

“She had to work today. She is a housekeepe­r,” she said. “I work two blocks away. I felt the noise.”

Yazira de la Caridad said the explosion shook her home a block from the hotel: “The whole building moved. I thought it was an earthquake.” Besides the pandemic’s impact on Cuba’s tourism sector, the country has been struggling with sanctions imposed by former President Trump that have been kept in place under the Biden administra­tion. The sanctions limit visits by U.S. tourists and restrict remittance­s from Cubans residing in the U.S. to their families on the island.

Tourism had started to revive early this year, but the war in Ukraine crimped a boom of Russian visitors, who accounted for almost a third of those arriving in Cuba last year.

The explosion occurred as Cuba’s government hosted the final day of a tourism convention in the beach town of Varadero, aimed at drawing investors.

 ?? Adalberto Roque AFP/Getty Images ?? A RESCUE WORKER looks for people who may be trapped in the rubble of Havana’s Hotel Saratoga after Friday’s blast. “It’s not a bomb or an attack. It is a tragic accident,” Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel said.
Adalberto Roque AFP/Getty Images A RESCUE WORKER looks for people who may be trapped in the rubble of Havana’s Hotel Saratoga after Friday’s blast. “It’s not a bomb or an attack. It is a tragic accident,” Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel said.
 ?? Yander Zamora Anadolu Agency ?? THE EXPLOSION blew away outer walls of the Old Havana hotel, which was undergoing renovation.
Yander Zamora Anadolu Agency THE EXPLOSION blew away outer walls of the Old Havana hotel, which was undergoing renovation.

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