The Columbus Dispatch

6 dead, dozens injured in Italian nightclub stampede

- By Elisabetta Povoledo

ROME — At least six people were killed and about 40 others were injured, more than a dozen of them seriously, in a stampede early Saturday at a nightclub in central Italy where a popular rapper had been scheduled to perform, officials said.

Panic broke out after midnight at the Lanterna Azzurra club in Corinaldo, a town near the city of Senigallia on the Adriatic coast. One unidentifi­ed witness interviewe­d by RAI News, the national news channel, said pepper spray had been fired inside the club, setting off panic. But investigat­ors did not confirm that.

Reports said five of the people killed were minors and another was the mother of one of the young fans who had gone to the club to hear a concert by Sfera Ebbasta, an Italian rapper.

Luca Cari, a spokesman for the national fire department who was at the scene, said by phone that the situation had been “dramatic” and that it was still unclear how the events unfolded.

Italian media showed images of dozens of ambulances outside the club and rescue workers tending to survivors.

Officials said 14 people were hospitaliz­ed in serious condition. Roberto Papa, a medical official in Ancona, said during a news conference Saturday morning that seven were taken to Ancona’s main hospital in critical condition, all in their teens or early 20s. Several others were still under observatio­n.

Col. Cristian Carrozza of the Carabinier­i, one of the chief investigat­ors, said by phone that “at least 100 witnesses had been interrogat­ed” so far, and that various theories about what had caused the panic were being examined. One was that the use of Mace, or pepper spray, provoked the stampede, he said.

He also confirmed that some 1,400 tickets had been sold for the concert, though the club could legally hold only 870 people.

“One hypothesis was that overcrowdi­ng was a contributi­ng cause,” he said.

Oreste Capocasa, police chief of the nearby city of Ancona, told RAI that many people were hurt when metal railings on a ramp outside one of the emergency exits collapsed.

People tumbled off the ramp and others fell on top of them, he said. Early reports from Italian media had indicated that one or more of the emergency exits had been blocked, but Capocasa said that was not the case.

The news agency ANSA said police were interviewi­ng six bouncers who worked at the club during the evening.

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