Tag: Dominican Republic

  • The owner of a Dominican nightclub whose roof collapsed, killing 232, speaks for the first time

    SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico – A roof that collapsed at a popular nightclub in the Dominican Republic and killed 232 people this month had filtration problems for decades and had been repeatedly fixed with plasterboard, according to its owner.

    Antonio Espaillat, who also serves as manager of the Jet Set nightclub in the Dominican capital of Santo Domingo, spoke with local TV station Telesistema on Wednesday in his first interview since the April 8 disaster.

    Espaillat told a reporter with El Día news program that employees had added new plasterboard to the roof hours before the collapse.

    He noted that plasterboard had fallen repeatedly throughout the years for reasons including water that filtered through the club’s air conditioning units. However, Espaillat said no one ever inspected the roof or water filtrations.

    “We always bought plasterboard. Always,” said Espaillat, who spoke in a subdued manner throughout the nearly one-hour interview.

    A spokeswoman for Espaillat did not return a message for comment seeking an interview with him.

    Espaillat said he learned about the collapse when his sister called him from underneath the debris, trapped along with hundreds of others attending a concert by beloved merengue singer Rubby Pérez, who was among those killed.

    “To the families of the victims, I want to say I’m sorry. I’m very sorry,” Espaillat said. “I am completely destroyed.”

    ‘We were all surprised’

    Espaillat said he was 6 years old when his mother founded the legendary club 52 years ago. The club later moved to a space occupied by a shuttered movie theater and remained in that location for 30 years until the collapse.

    He said there were six air-conditioning units on the roof, plus three water tanks. An electric plant was installed in an adjacent room, not on the roof, he added.

    Every six to eight years, a specialized crew would waterproof the roof, with the last waterproofing done about a month before the collapse, he said.

    The heavy woofers that boomed music at Jet Set, known for its merengue parties held every Monday, were on the floor, he said.

    Espaillat said if there was something he could have done to avoid the collapse, he would have done it.

    “There was no warning, nothing. We were all surprised,” he said.

    ‘I’m going to face everything’
    The Dominican government has created a committee that includes local and international experts tasked with investigating the collapse.

    About 515 people were at Jet Set when the roof fell on the crowd, according to Espaillat.

    In the 53 hours following the disaster, crews rescued 189 survivors. Dozens of others were hospitalized.

    The 232 victims include seven doctors; a retired UN official; former MLB players Octavio Dotel and Tony Enrique Blanco Cabrera; and Nelsy Cruz, the governor of Montecristi province and sister of seven-time Major League Baseball All-Star Nelson Cruz.

    At least three lawsuits have been filed.
    Espaillat, who said he usually attended Jet Set’s Monday merengue parties, was in Las Vegas for a convention when his sister called.

    “How can a roof collapse?” he recalled wondering as he flew back to the Dominican Republic.

    Espaillat said he did not immediately visit the site upon arriving because officials worried about his safety, noting that people at the scene were angry.

    He said he hasn’t slept much since the disaster, and that he has talked to the families of his employees and some of the victim’s relatives.

    “I’m going to face everything,” he said.

    “I’m not going anywhere.”

    An ongoing investigation
    The investigation into what caused the collapse could take a couple of months and has raised questions about the safety of infrastructure across Santo Domingo and beyond.

    There is currently no government agency tasked with inspecting the buildings of private businesses in the Dominican Republic, although President Luis Abinader announced last week that new legislation is expected to change that.

    Yamil Castillo, a structural engineer and vice president of the Society of Engineers of Puerto Rico, said water leaks can be extremely damaging and should be taken care of immediately.

    Castillo, who is not involved in investigating the collapse, warned that water seeping into the different materials that compose a roof can weigh it down, in addition to whatever else is placed on the roof, including air conditioning units.

    Salty air also cause corrosion and roof damage, he said.

    “Those leaks should have been fixed,” Castillo said, adding that replacing the plasterboard was not enough.

    AN-AP

  • Death toll in Dominican Republic disaster nears 250, nightclub faces lawsuits

    The death toll at last week’s nightclub roof collapse in the capital of the Dominican Republic rose to 231, the Minister of Interior and Police said on Monday, as families of victims began filing lawsuits against the nightclub’s owners.

    Holy Week will be different this year in the Caribbean tourist destination, with multiple events and activities canceled and beach parties banned, according to the Dominican Navy.

    Municipal authorities have also suspended the traditional Easter activities that take place in public squares and parks.

    Relatives of Virgilio Rafael Cruz, one of the victims who died on April 8, have begun a legal action against the establishment’s owners, the family’s lawyer told local media on Monday.

    Other families have also indicated they will file lawsuits.

    Jet Set nightclub is owned by Antonio Espaillat, the second-largest broadcaster in the Dominican Republic and owner of 50 radio stations.

    “From the very beginning we have been collaborating fully and transparently with authorities,” Espaillat said in a video posted on Instagram shortly after the incident.

    Local media and ticketing sites indicate the club could accommodate between 700 and 1,000 people, though there is no official confirmation on how many were present at the time of the disaster.

    Authorities have begun investigations to determine the causes of the collapse. The forensic investigation will take about three months to reach an official conclusion, according to Leonardo Reyes, who heads a government department that oversees building structure vulnerabilities.

    REUTERS

  • Death toll in Dominican Republic nightclub tragedy tops 200 as burials begin

    SANTO DOMINGO, April 10 – A roof collapse at a concert in a popular nightclub in the capital of the Dominican Republic has killed at least 221 people, authorities said on Thursday, with recovery efforts set to wrap up as families mourn the dead.

    Politicians, athletes and other prominent local figures had gathered at the Jet Set club in Santo Domingo earlier this week for a concert by merengue singer Rubby Perez.

    The event turned tragic when the roof suddenly collapsed after midnight Tuesday.

    Emergency crews were on site sorting through the rubble with heavy machinery early on Thursday, on what Juan Manuel Mendez, head of the country’s emergency operations center (COE), said would be the last day of rescue and recovery efforts.

    “This is the hardest task I’ve had in my 20 years of leading the COE,” Mendez said, breaking down in tears.

    Emergency teams pulled nearly 200 survivors from the building on Tuesday. Rescue workers were not expecting to find more on Thursday.

    “Rescuers have practically finished sweeping ground zero. There’s just a small area left to look over,” Mendez said.

    Still, families of those missing waited outside the wreckage of the club, embracing each other.

    Perez, the singer, was among those killed in the crush.

    President Luis Abinader attended his funeral on Thursday, with a public memorial service for him set to follow later in the day.

    Pitcher Octavio Dotel and slugger Tony Blanco, both former Major League Baseball players, were also killed.

    The government said late on Wednesday that, once recovery efforts wrapped up, they would launch an investigation into the cause of the roof collapse.

    REUTERS

  • Officials scramble to identify victims of Dominican club roof collapse that killed at least 184

    SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic – The number of victims who died after a roof collapsed at an iconic nightclub surged to 184 late Wednesday as dozens of people lingered outside the Dominican Republic’s forensic institute for news of their loved ones still missing more than a day after disaster struck.

    Juan Manuel Méndez, director of the Center of Emergency Operations, said crews at the scene were still looking for victims and potential survivors, although no one has been found alive since Tuesday afternoon.

    “We’re not going to abandon anyone. Our work will continue,” he said.

    Several blocks away from the rubble, people searching for friends and family donned face masks and began complaining about a bad odor as they pleaded with officials to give them information about their loved ones.

    Earlier in the day, National Institute of Forensic Pathology officials read the names of 54 victims they had identified so far.

    “We cannot wait until nighttime!” said one woman who was waiting for news of a relative whose name she did not hear. “We’re going to go crazy!”

    Officials called for calm, saying they had already delivered at least 28 bodies to their families but did not yet have a tally of all the bodies recovered. Late Wednesday, officials raised the number of dead to at least 184, with over 200 injured.

    AP

  • Nearly 100 dead in Dominican Republic nightclub roof collapse

    SANTO DOMINGO – Rescuers raced to find survivors early Wednesday after the roof of a Dominican Republic nightclub collapsed during a concert by popular singer Rubby Perez, one of nearly 100 people killed in the disaster.

    Rescue workers were pressing on with the search effort, now limited more to recovering bodies from the rubble more than 24 hours after the roof caved in.

    AN-AFP

  • At least 79 dead in Dominican Republic nightclub roof collapse

    Local media said there were between 500 and 1,000 people in the club when disaster struck shortly after midnight. (Reuters)

    SANTO DOMINGO – Rescuers raced to find survivors Tuesday among the rubble of a Dominican Republic nightclub where at least 79 people, including a prominent merengue performer and a former Major League Baseball star, were killed when the roof collapsed.

    Renowned Dominican merengue singer Rubby Perez, who was on stage at the popular Jet Set nightclub when the roof caved in shortly after midnight, was one of those killed in the disaster, according to his manager.

    “We are waiting for the children to reach an agreement for the funeral,” Perez’s manager Enrique Paulino said, confirming his death.

    More than 370 rescue personnel combed mounds of fallen bricks, steel bars and tin sheets for survivors.

    Also among the dead was 51-year-old retired MLB pitcher Octavio Dotel, who won a World Series in 2011 with the St. Louis Cardinals.

    He was rescued alive but died of his injuries while being taken to hospital, local media reported.

    A black-and-white photo of the player and images of the Dominican flag were projected onto the scoreboard at Citi Field in New York before Tuesday’s game between the New York Mets and the Miami Marlins.

    “Peace to his soul,” the Dominican Republic Professional Baseball League wrote on social media.

    Local media said there were between 500 and 1,000 people in the club when disaster struck shortly at 12:44 a.m. local time (4:44 GMT).
    The club has capacity for 700 people seated and about 1,000 people standing.

    Dozens of ambulances ferried the injured to hospital, as scores of people gathered outside the venue desperately seeking news of their loved ones.

    Perez was on stage when there was a blackout and the roof came crashing down, according to eyewitness reports.

    Perez’s daughter Zulinka told reporters she had managed to escape after the roof collapsed, but he did not.

    Also among the dead was the governor of the Monte Cristi municipality, Nelsy Cruz, according to President Luis Abinader.

    The death toll started at 15 and kept rising throughout the day. By evening it had reached 79.

    “As long as there is hope for life, all authorities will be working to recover or rescue these people,” said Juan Manuel Mendez, director of the Emergency Operations Center.

    President Abinader visited the scene and declared three days of national mourning.

    Iris Pena, a woman who had attended the show, told SIN television how she escaped with her son.

    “At one point, dirt started falling like dust into the drink on the table,” she said.

    “A stone fell and cracked the table where we were, and we got out,” Pena recounted.

    “The impact was so strong, as if it had been a tsunami or an earthquake.”

    Dozens of family members flocked to hospitals for news.

    “We are desperate,” Regina del Rosa, whose sister was at the concert, told SIN.

    “They are not giving us news, they are not telling us anything.”

    Helicopter images revealed a large hole where the club’s roof once was.
    A crane was helping lift some of the heavier rubble as men in hard hats dug through the debris.

    Authorities have issued a call for Dominicans to donate blood.

    The Instagram page of the Jet Set club said it has been in operation for more than 50 years, with shows every Monday until the early hours.

    Its last post before Monday’s event invited fans to come and “enjoy his (Perez’s) greatest hits and dance in the country’s best nightclub.”

    On Tuesday, the club issued a statement saying it was working “fully and transparently” with authorities.

    The Dominican Republic, which shares the island of Hispaniola with Haiti, received over 11 million visitors in 2024, according to the tourism ministry.

    Tourism generates about 15 percent of GDP, with visitors attracted by its Caribbean beaches, music and nightlife, as well as the colonial architecture of Santo Domingo.

    AN-AFP

  • Death toll from Dominican Republic nightclub collapse rises to 66

    PANAMA CITY – The death toll from the nightclub roof collapse on Tuesday in Santo Domingo, the capital of the Dominican Republic, has climbed to 66, with 155 others injured, authorities confirmed.

    Rescue operations are ongoing, said Juan Manuel Mendez, director of the Emergency Operations Center, describing the tragedy as one that has plunged not only the affected families but also the entire nation into mourning.

    Dominican President Luis Abinader has declared three days of national mourning starting April 8 to honor the victims.

    The collapse occurred during a party at the Jet Set nightclub in the capital in the early hours Tuesday. Jet Set is a well-known nightclub in Santo Domingo and often hosts live performances during the week.

    Investigation is under way to determine the cause of the collapse.

    XINHUA

  • Nightclub roof collapse in Dominican Republic kills at least 27 including governor

    Rescuers work at the site of the collapsed Jet Set nightclub in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, April 8, 2025. REUTERS

    SANTO DOMINGO – At least 27 people were killed, including a provincial governor, and 134 more injured in the early hours of Tuesday when the roof of a nightclub in the Dominican capital Santo Domingo collapsed, authorities said.

    Rescue crews were working to pull out people still believed to be trapped under the rubble, said Juan Manuel Mendez, head of the Dominican Republic’s emergency operations center.

    Mendez did not give a tally for the number of people believed to have been inside the Jet Set nightclub, located near the coast.

    President Luis Abinader said the dead included Nelsy Cruz, governor of the northern Monte Cristi province.

    “We deeply regret the tragedy,” he wrote on X, adding that authorities were working tirelessly to recover the victims. “Our prayers are with the affected families.”

    REUTERS