Friday, November 19, 2010

Grand Riviera Princess explosion kills 7 in Playa del Carmen

A tranquil morning in Playa del Carmen, Mexico had been shattered by an explosion at the Grand Riviera Princess Hotel that claimed even victims. A crater might be seen in the aftermath of the blast that destroyed the restaurant in the hotel. Swamp gas building up under the resort is suspected as the reason for the hotel blast, according to Mexican officials.

Blast in the Grand Riviera Princess

In Playa del Carmen at the Grand Riviera Princess resort, there had been an explosion. 2 Mexican employees and five Canadian tourists were all killed in the blast. About 50 miles south of Cancun on Mexico's Caribbean coast, there is the 676-room resort that had 18 guests injured also. Breakfast had been being served at the hotel restaurant when the explosion occurred. It projected 50 yards metal, glass and pavement. Those from Canada are 8 of probably the most seriously injured guests. Right now, two individuals are seriously injured. They are in critical condition. There are less significant injuries amongst ten others including eight Mexican employees and 2 United States citizens.

Exactly what the hotel blast revealed happening

The floor of the restaurant in the Grand Riviera Princess hotel had been sent via the ceiling by the power of the blast, according to Francisco Alor, the attorney general of Mexico’s state of Quintana Roo, in an interview with CBC News. In the building, guests experienced getting knocked off their feet and into walls, accounts Columbia Broadcasting System News who spoke with a hotel guest. This occurred because all the air had been forced back into the building after getting sucked out by the explosion. Glass was flying everywhere. Significant injuries were brought on due to this. The guests in the resort helped out by making deck chairs into stretchers. The victims were carried out this way.

Swamp gas possibility

The Grand Riviera Princess explosion had been investigated which ended up showing that there may have been natural gas under the resort lobby floor which may have caught fire. The hotel was built on a concrete slab that had been near the beach and over the swamp although you will find no gas lines. Authorities believe decomposing plant matter underground produced the gas. The construction of the Playa del Carmen resort is being investigated also for making sure that there weren't any illegal shortcuts done to trigger the issue.

Info from

CBC News

cbc.ca/canada/edmonton/story/2010/11/14/mexico-hotel-explosion.html

Dallas Morning News

dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/news/world/stories/DN-mexico_15int.ART.State.Edition1.e26e42.html

New York Times

nytimes.com/2010/11/15/world/americas/15mexico.html?_r=1&ref=world



No comments: