Gothenburg discothèque fire

The Gothenburg discothèque fire was caused by an arson attack on 29 October 1998, which occurred on premises located on Hisingen island in Gothenburg, Sweden. These had been rented for the night by an organization catering to the Macedonian community in Gothenburg for the purpose of hosting a discothèque. At the time of the fire, 375 people aged 12–25 were present, the vast majority of whom had various ethnic minority backgrounds. The fire department had estimated the building could only hold up to 150. In all 63 were killed and 213 injured.

Gothenburg discothèque fire
Claes Hake's memorial for the dead, unveiled on the tenth anniversary of the fire in late-October 2008
LocationGothenburg, Sweden
Date29 October 1998 (1998-10-29)
c. 23:40 (CET)
Attack type
Arson, mass murder
Deaths63
Injured213
PerpetratorsShoresh Kaveh
Housein Arsani
Mohammad Mohammadamini
Meysam Mohammadyeh
MotiveRetaliation for being denied free entry into the discothèque

Fire

The fire started on the premises of the Macedonian organization on the third floor, where a discothèque for secondary school students had been arranged to celebrate Halloween.[1][2] It was set in a stairway serving as the club's emergency exit. As a result, the exit was blocked, and a single stairway became the only available escape route. Many young people were forced to jump out windows to safety, but since these were 2.2 metres (7.2 feet) above floor level and 5 metres (16 feet) above ground level outside the building, many were injured in the process.[3][4] Furthermore, adherence to fire safety standards was generally poor at the site.

The first emergency call arrived at 23:42, but due to the background noise, it was some time before the operator could understand what the caller was trying to say. At 23:45 a so-called "major call-out" took place from a fire station on the island, and four minutes later the first rescue team arrived on the scene. Six other fire crews were dispatched a short time afterwards. About 60 young people were rescued by firefighters with self-contained breathing apparatus, 40 of whom were led down the staircase and 20 carried out through the windows. Others managed to escape on their own.[4]

Victims

A total of 63 young people were killed and 213 were injured, of whom 50 seriously.[4] For some time afterwards, it could not be determined whether the fire had been accidental or caused by an arson attack, but speculation soon started that the fire, whose victims were mainly immigrants, had been started with xenophobic or racist motives. Posters were distributed around Gothenburg with the text "60 young immigrants have died, now 60 Swedes must die."[5] It was later ascertained that the four suspected arsonists were themselves immigrants from Iran.[6][7][8]

Investigation

On 1 June 1999, it was reported that two suspects had been arrested but later released. In December 1999, a reward of 3 million kronor was offered for information that might help to ascertain the cause of the fire.[9] At that time, no one was sure how the fire had started, despite over 1,400 people being questioned by the Swedish police. Later that month, the police also appealed for leads on a national TV show. In January 2000, three suspects were eventually taken into custody by the police, and in February a fourth was arrested. However, it is believed they were arrested before the reward had even been offered. No preliminary investigation was ever started against the party's arrangers.

Criminal prosecution

The fire had been set by four teenagers aged 17–19, who had been denied entry to the disco as a result of an argument. All four were charged and found guilty of aggravated arson, and the firestarter, Shoresh Kaveh, was sentenced by the district court in 2000 to eight years' imprisonment. Two others, Housein Arsani and Mohammad Mohammadamini, were sentenced to six years in prison, while the fourth, Meysam Mohammadyeh, who was a minor at the time of the offence, received three years in a juvenile care facility. Both the defendants and the prosecution appealed the sentences. The court of appeals upheld two of the verdicts, but the two verdicts of six years' imprisonment were raised to seven years.

Mohammadyeh, nicknamed the youngest by the press, was represented by Leif Silbersky. It was established that the other three suspects were friends, and although Mohammadyeh had wanted to become friends with two of them, he was afraid of Kaveh.[10] Silbersky asked for Mohammadyeh to be acquitted, as in his opinion thought Mohammadyeh should not be held legally responsible for his passivity.[11] The court of appeals, however, considered it proven that the four "had mutually agreed to ruin the party by starting a fire", and that it was of "decisive importance with regards to the question of guilt that it had not been possible to prove that no other person or persons than Kaveh had torn the paper or started the fire in the stairway."[10] Professor Christian Diesen is of the opinion that it is possible that Mohammadyeh had "become involved in a sequence of events he had no control over and would have been judged differently if the fire had not had such devastating consequences."[12] The penalties may be regarded as mild by international comparison, but Swedish law at the time allowed those aged 18–20 to be sentenced to a maximum of 8 years of prison, which was given to the leader. Those under 18 are given prison only for severe violent crimes, a maximum of 4 years.

The case was prosecuted by Thomas Bodström, who later became Minister for Justice in Sweden.

Legacy

Relatives of the victims later founded the non-profit organization BOA (association for the relatives of the fire victims), which later for example was in contact with the relatives of victims in a similar discothèque fire in Volendam, Netherlands, and offered support to relatives of victims of the 2004 tsunami. The fire department in Gothenburg, as well as survivors and relatives of victims, also provide information to raise awareness among young people of how quickly a small fire can spread and the potential consequences.[4]

On the tenth anniversary of the fire in 2008, a permanent memorial was unveiled, made out of polished granite with the name and age of each victim engraved in gold. The monument was placed at Backaplan in the part of Hisingen where the fire occurred. It was designed by the artist Claes Hake.

References

  1. "Dance Hall Fire" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 31 March 2010. National Fire Protection Association. Retrieved on April 3, 2008
  2. "60 dead in Sweden dance hall fire". CNN. 1998. Archived from the original on September 7, 2005. Retrieved April 30, 2008.
  3. P3 dokumentär Archived 2009-02-03 at the Wayback Machine
  4. Sirenen no. 6, September 2008
  5. Hansson, Annika; Werner, Anna (November 5, 1998). "Affischer ska piska upp hatstämning i Göteborg". Aftonbladet (in Swedish). Gothenburg. Retrieved July 23, 2015.
  6. Rönn, Cina (August 29, 2000). "Skärpta straff för diskobranden" [Longer sentences for discothèque fire]. Aftonbladet (in Swedish). Retrieved July 23, 2015.
  7. "Gärningsmännen" [The perpetrators]. Göteborgs-Posten (in Swedish). October 26, 2008. Archived from the original on October 29, 2008.
  8. Atterstam, Inger; Engström, Annika (October 26, 2008). "Vi glömmer aldrig - Tio år efter branden på Backaplan" [We never forget - ten years after the fire at Backaplan]. Svenska Dagbladet (in Swedish). Retrieved July 23, 2015.
  9. Johansson, Anders (April 26, 2000). "Branden i Göteborg: Åtalet offentligt" [The fire in Gothenburg: The indictment public]. Aftonbladet (in Swedish). Retrieved July 23, 2015.
  10. "Hovrättens dom" [Verdict of the Court of appeals] (in Swedish). Sveriges Radio. Archived from the original on December 16, 2003.
  11. Sjödin, Stefan (June 9, 2000). "Ny rättegång i juli. Minst tre av de dömda kommer att överklaga" [New trial in July. At least three of those convicted will appeal]. Aftonbladet (in Swedish). Retrieved July 23, 2015.
  12. Diesen, Christian (2000). "Göteborgsbranden, Malexander- och Söderbergsmorden – svåra mål i teorin, enkla i praktiken?" (PDF). Juridisk Tidskrift (in Swedish) (3). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 26, 2009.

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