Explosion at Playa del Carmen resort kills seven individuals

A blast in the Grand Riviera Princess hotel in Playa del Carmen, Mexico, killed seven people Sunday morning. The resort restaurant had been gutted. An enormous crater served as testament to the power of the explosion. Based on government authorities, an accumulation of swamp gas underground is the likely reason for the Grand Riviera Princess explosion. Article source - Blast kills 7 at Grand Riviera Princess hotel in Playa del Carmen by Personal Money Store.
The Grand Riviera Princess blast
The blast at the Grand Riviera Princess resort in Playa del Carmen claimed the lives of five Canadian tourists and two Mexican hotel employees. 18 guests in the hotel were injured 50 miles south of Cancun on Mexico’s Caribbean coast by the explosion. The room had 676 rooms in it. Breakfast was being served in the resort restaurant when the explosion occurred. It projected 50 yards metal, glass and pavement. Canadians got the worst of it. Eight of the most seriously injured are from Canada. Right now, two individuals are seriously injured. They are in critical condition. You will find less severe injuries amongst ten others including eight Mexican employees and two U.S. citizens.
The hotel blast specifics
CBS News interviewed the attorney general of Mexico’s state of Quintana Roo, Francisco Alor, who said the Grand Riviera Princess hotel restaurant floor went through the ceiling with the explosion. Within the building, guests experienced getting knocked off their feet and into walls, accounts CBS 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. Victims were carried out by resort guests on deck chairs.
May be swamp gas
Natural gas under the floor of the resort lobby getting ignited is expected right now. This is because the Grand Riviera Princess explosion was investigated. Gas lines would not be the trigger since there are not any nearby. Of course, a swamp near the beach had been where the concrete slab was put where the resort was built. It's suspected that the gas originated from plant matter underground that had been decomposing. This is exactly what authorities suggest. A separate investigation has been launched to determine whether illegal shortcuts had been taken within the construction of the Playa del Carmen resort.
Data fromCBC News
cbc.ca/canada/edmonton/story/2010/11/14/mexico-hotel-explosion.htmlDallas Morning Newsdallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/news/world/stories/DN-mexico_15int.ART.State.Edition1.e26e42.htmlNew York Timesnytimes.com/2010/11/15/world/americas/15mexico.html?_r=1&ref=world

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