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13 die in Peru disco stampede after police coronavirus lockdown raid

Police officers outside the Thomas disco in Lima, Peru, where officials said 13 died in a stampede.
(Associated Press)
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Thirteen people died in a stampede at a disco in Peru after a police raid to enforce the country’s lockdown during the COVID-19 pandemic, officials said Sunday.

The stampede happened at the Thomas disco in Lima, where about 120 people had gathered for a party Saturday night, the Interior Ministry said.

People tried to escape through the only door of the second-floor disco, trampling one another and becoming trapped in the confined space, according to authorities.

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After the stampede, police had to force open the door.

“I feel sorry for the relatives ... but also anger and indignation with the businesspeople who organized the event,” Peruvian President Martín Vizcarra said at a public event in the south of the country. He urged judicial authorities to punish those who had broken the law.

About two dozen people were arrested, and 15 of those tested positive for the novel coronavirus and will be quarantined, Claudio Ramírez, a Health Ministry official, told reporters.

The party “was a breeding ground for the transmission of this disease, there was a viral load because it was a closed environment,” Ramírez said.

Franco Asensios, one of those who attended the party, told local radio RPP that the police raid started at 9 p.m. and that authorities told the partygoers to let the women exit first.

“People got excited and started to go down, and then they said that the people in front were suffocating,” he said.

Some people at the scene alleged that police fired shots and tear gas during the raid, but the police chief, Gen. Orlando Velasco, denied it.

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Alejandro Ruiz, a watchman on the street where the disco is, told RPP that parties had been held there previously.

“The noise could be heard two blocks away,” said Ruiz. When police cars passed by, people in the disco turned off the lights and turned down the volume of the music, he said.

The building in which the nightclub is located is dilapidated on the outside and is in an industrial area in Lima’s Los Olivos district.

Felipe Castillo, mayor of the district, told a local television station that the club was in his jurisdiction but that surveillance and supervision in the streets are “precarious” because of the pandemic, which has resulted in a reduction in the collection of taxes.

Nightclubs have been prohibited from operating since March because of the pandemic. Peru started lifting quarantine restrictions June 30 in an effort to get the economy moving again, and the daily reported number of virus infections has doubled to more than 9,000 in recent weeks.

Peru has reported about 27,500 deaths from the coronavirus.

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