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North Macedonia nightclub fire claims more than 50 lives in Kocani

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Guy Delauney

BBC Balkans correspondent

Watch: North Macedonia nightclub ablaze

Police have detained 10 people after a fire at an nightclub in North Macedonia killed at least 59 people, officials have told the BBC.

The blaze broke out around 02:30 (01:30 GMT) at the Pulse club in Kocani, where about 500 people had gathered for a concert by DNK, a popular hip-hop duo in the country.

Only one member of the band survived the fire, and was being treated in hospital, a spokesman for the public prosecutors office told the BBC Newshour.

Biljana Arsovska added that short-term detentions had been issued for 10 suspects believed to be responsible for the fire – including “officials from the ministries which gave out this licence”.

Ms Arsovska said there had been only “one efficient exit” in the building, as the venue’s back door was locked and could not be used.

The first on-site inspections on Sunday had also showed several “abnormalities” in the venue. “There are deficiencies in the system for fire-extinguishing and the system for lightning,” she said.

The venue, in a town around 100km (60 miles) east of the capital Skopje, has been described as an “improvised nightclub” in the local press, having previously been a carpet warehouse.

Interior Minister Pance Toskovski said on Sunday afternoon it did not have a legal licence to operate, while police are looking into whether bribery and corruption were linked to the fire are under way.

Citing initial reports, Toskovski said the fire had been started by sparks from pyrotechnic devices that had hit the ceiling, which was made of highly flammable material.

Reuters A view outside a night club, following a fire resulting in casualties, in the town of Kocani, North Macedonia, March 16, 2025Reuters

Hundreds of people were said to have been attending a concert by the band DNK

Footage shows the band – which formed in 2002 and has topped the North Macedonian charts over the past decade – playing on stage when two flares go off, after which sparks then catch fire on the ceiling before spreading rapidly.

Video verified by the BBC shows people trying to extinguish the flames on the ceiling. The footage shows the club was still full and some people appeared to be watching efforts to put out the fire rather than leaving.

Reports suggest the fact there was only a single entry and exit point to the improvised nightclub caused panic.

Marija Taseva, 20, told Channel 5 TV she was caught in a crush at the club as people rushed for the exits. She recalled falling to the ground and being trampled during the chaos before managing to get out.

“I don’t know how, but somehow I managed to get out,” she told the Reuters news agency. “I’m fine now, but there are many dead.”

She added that her 25-year-old sister – who her family had previously been searching for – had died, saying: “I was saved and she wasn’t.”

Reuters Marija TasevaReuters

Marija Taseva tells reporters everybody started screaming as the fire broke out, but there was “only one exit”

Red Cross volunteer Mustafa Saidov said most of those affected were young people aged 18 to 20. Officials say more than 20 of the injured and three of those killed were under 18.

“The situation is brutal, chaotic, the stories are very sad, and unfortunately many young lives are lost,” Mr Saidov added.

Dr Vladislav Gruev, a specialist in reconstructive and plastic surgery at the University Clinic for Surgical Diseases in the capital, told the BBC most of the patients being treated at his hospital arrived with extensive burn injuries.

“[They have] second and third degree burns in the head, neck, and upper torso,” he said.

Kocani’s hospital director said earlier that staff had initially been struggling to identify patients due to a lack of ID cards.

She said 18 patients were in critical condition.

Prime Minister Hristijan Mickoski called it a “difficult and very sad day” for the country, which had lost many “young lives”.

Reuters A drone view shows a night club destroyed in a fire resulting in casualties, in the town of Kocani, North Macedonia, March 16, 2025.Reuters

The government has declared seven days of national mourning, and the government is holding an emergency session as part of ongoing investigations on how the incident unfolded.

Prime Minister Mickoski said the government was “fully mobilised and will do everything necessary to deal with the consequences and determine the causes of this tragedy”.

European leaders have voiced their condolences, with European Commission President Ursula Von Der Leyen saying the EU “stands in solidarity with the people of North Macedonia in this difficult time”.

Neighbouring Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic called it “a tragedy of immense magnitude”, adding that fears remain as “many more people will not be able to withstand the level of injuries they have at this moment”.

Additional reporting from Richard Irvine-Brown and Malu Cursino.

Map showing North Macedonia in relation to other the countries it borders, including Albania, Greece and Bulgaria.

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