Vietnam entertainment venue owner arrested after blaze that killed 32

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HANOI (AFP) – Vietnamese authorities have arrested the owner of an entertainment establishment where a fire killed 32 people earlier this month, police said yesterday.

The blaze ripped through a three-storey entertainment venue nine days ago in a dense residential neighbourhood of Thuan An city, north of commercial hub Ho Chi Minh City.

It trapped customers and staff as smoke filled the staircase and blocked the emergency exit.

Seventeen people were injured, with many suffering broken bones after the flames forced them to jump from the roof, police said.

Binh Duong provincial police yesterday confirmed in a statement that bar owner Le Anh Xuan, 42, was arrested a day earlier and would face criminal charges related to breaching fire prevention regulations. He will be held in custody for four months while the investigation continues, police added. While 15 of the injured have been released from hospital, two of the most seriously hurt are still receiving medical treatment.

Firefighters and onlookers at the scene of a deadly fire that engulfed an entertainment establishment in Binh Duong province, north of Ho Chi Minh City. PHOTO: AFP

The bodies of the 32 people killed have been handed over to their families. Firefighters initially struggled to enter the building because of the fire’s intensity and had to knock down part of a wall to get inside.

Sixty people were inside the 30-room venue when the fire erupted and eight people were found dead in the establishment’s toilet.

In the aftermath of the tragedy survivors described their harrowing escape from the blaze.

“We thought we would die,” worker Do Thanh Tu told state media.

Authorities initially blamed an electrical short circuit for the blaze but said the venue had met all fire safety standards in checks over the past three years. Police partly blamed intoxicated singers.

“They were intoxicated. So when the staff informed them about the fire … people in some rooms didn’t listen,” provincial police chief Trinh Ngoc Quyen said during a press conference.

In what was previously Vietnam’s deadliest fire, 13 people died in a 2018 blaze in an apartment complex in Ho Chi Minh City.

In 2016, a fire at a karaoke facility in the capital Hanoi left 13 people dead, prompting a country-wide assessment of fire prevention measures at entertainment establishments. Vietnamese Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh has ordered a further inspection of high-risk venues.

Last month, three firefighters died after trying to extinguish a fire at another entertainment establishment in Hanoi.