The Palm Beach Post

17 dead as tear gas canister triggers stampede at club

- By Rachelle Krygier Washington Post

CARACAS, VENEZUELA — At least 17 people died early Saturday after a tear-gas canister was set off inside a club in a middle-class neighbor- hood of western Caracas, officials said.

The victims, eight of whom were younger than 18, suffered either asphyxia or trauma to the body as hundreds of clubgoers stam- peded to escape the fumes. Most of the present were teenagers who were celebratin­g their high school graduation­s at the private Social

Club El Paraiso, according to government officials and security forces.

“A fight started at midnight, and one of the people activated a gas artifact that originated the stampede of more than 500 people that were there,” Interior Min- ister Néstor Reverol said on state television.

He said seven people had been detained based on wit-

nesses’ accounts. The club has been closed down, and the person in charge of it is also in custody. “The Government of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela deplores this sad event and sends condolence­s to family members of the victims,” Reverol said. It’s unclear how a civilian gained access to a tear-gas canister. Such devices are used by security forces to break up protests that regularly fill the streets of Venezuela, which has been rocked by hyperinfla­tion and shortages of even the most basic of goods. “Tear gas bombs should be in hands of national armed forces and distribute­d by anti-riot brigades,” said university professor Mónica Kräuter, whose recently published doctoral thesis explores the damages and ethics in use of tear gas. “This is a chemical arm. How can a young kid or any civilian have access to it?” she said.

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