Bangkok pub inferno kills at least 27 people

Panarat Thepgumpanat and Chayut Setboonsarng |

Firefighters say a deadly blaze at a Bangkok pub took about half an hour to bring under control.
Firefighters say a deadly blaze at a Bangkok pub took about half an hour to bring under control.

An explosive fire at a popular pub in Thailand’s capital of Bangkok has killed ‌27 people, in one of the deadliest such incidents in the tourism hub in recent years.

“We have recovered 27 bodies, others are being sent to hospital,” Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul said on Monday.

The fire broke out around midnight on Sunday (3pm AEST).

Thailand Fire
Rescue workers are checking mobile phones in a bid to identify the victims. (AP PHOTO)

The pub ⁠in Bangkok’s Chatuchak district rapidly filled with smoke after a fire broke out around midnight on Sunday (3pm AEST), forcing ​many to run to the back of the venue near the bathrooms, but there were no fire escapes.

Another 63 people injured in the incident have been hospitalised, said Suriyachai Rawiwan, director of the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration’s Department of Disaster Prevention and Mitigation.

“The number of deaths has stabilized at 27,” he told Reuters.

By the time the rescue workers arrived at the scene ⁠of the accident, the fire that witnesses said ignited at the ‌front of the ​venue’s stage had already burned through the area, according to Suriyachai.

“We have to wait for the police to ​investigate,” he added.

Thailand Fire
The fire broke out in the tourist district of Bangkok. (AP PHOTO)

In the early hours of the morning, emergency personnel remained at Rong Beer Na ​Lat Phrao pub as bodies were prepared for transport and forensic teams collected evidence to help identify the victims.

Numbered bodies lay in two rows awaiting removal, surrounded by a large number of rescue workers. Firefighters ​stood ​near the pub’s entrance, its facade scorched and ​blackened by the blaze.

A band member at the venue told ‌local media that smoke suddenly filled the room after the lights briefly went out, followed by a massive explosion and fire.

“After the explosion I didn’t see anybody trying to run, most of them were on the floor asking for help,” he told reporters, his head still bandaged, without giving his name.

“I ran towards the door from the stage, ​about five metres. It was dark and there was smoke, no oxygen.”

Reuters