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Image source, EPA Image caption, The tragic blaze on Monday has reinforced calls for authorities to strengthen fire safety standards By Panisa Aemocha , Reporting from Bangkok , Paweena Ninbut , Reporting from Bangkok  and  Kelly Ng , Reporting from Singapore Published 7 minutes ago Thai indie band Thotsakan was performing at a packed bar in Bangkok on Sunday when band manager Ice Athipat Wijarn, seated off stage, saw smoke emerging from behind the keyboardist. The keyboardist, Kwang, shouted for people to flee - and within seconds a fierce blaze tore through Rong Beer Na Lat Phrao, in the city's vibrant Chatuchak district. Ice recalls fumbling with the door in the smoke-engulfed room as he tried to escape. Then something exploded, throwing him out of the bar. The blaze killed at least 27 people and left dozens more injured, authorities confirmed on Monday. Kwang, along with Thotsakan's female singer Breeze and drummer Bew, died after succumbing to their injuries, according to a Facebook post from another band member, Patchara Songphatkaew. The whereabouts of Din, a male singer, is still unclear. "Maybe a miracle will happen," Patchara wrote. "Let's pray things turn out well." Thotsakan's lead singer Tik Chaichana managed to escape unscathed only because he went to the washroom moments before the fire broke out, Thai media reported. Videos online showed him sobbing as he ran out of the burning bar. "I'm safe, thank you everyone for your concern. But my phone and all my belongings burned... My mind is truly not okay right now," Tik wrote in a Facebook post. Image source, Bangkok Metropolitan Administration Image caption, Thotsakan was performing on stage when the fire broke out and quickly engulfed the bar Rong Beer Na Lat Phrao, like many bars and pubs along the same street, was popular with locals. At the time of writing only one foreigner, a Laotian, has been identified among those who died. Footage posted online showed panicked customers screaming as they fled – some with their clothes on fire – through the flaming front door. More than 60 people are now being treated in hospital, eight of whom are critically injured, Thai authorities say. Several residents in the area described being stunned by the scale of the blaze. "I saw [firefighters] trying to extinguish the flames almost everywhere," said Titi Liewcha, who lives across the street from the bar. "I saw ambulances and rescue vehicles everywhere. I didn't know what to do. I just sat there stunned for a while." Titi and Sirinya, who also lives nearby, told BBC Thai they initially feared that the fire would spread towards their homes. "This is the first time I've seen such a major fire," Sirinya said. At least 27 killed, 22 critically injured after fire engulfs Bangkok bar Published 3 hours ago Watch: At the scene where Bangkok's deadly bar fire unfolded Published 4 hours ago Upon arriving at the scene, firefighters were able to bring the flames under control in about half an hour.
Be respectful and constructive. Comments are moderated.
  • 1
    Every life lost in that Bangkok fire was a tragedy of inadequate safety measures. These maze-like buildings arent just architectural flawstheyre deadly shortcuts that prioritize profit over people. We deserve better than firetraps that trap innocent souls in their final moments.
  • 2
    Every life lost in that Bangkok fire was a tragedy of inadequate safety measures. These maze-like buildings arent just architectural flawstheyre deadly shortcuts that prioritize profit over people. We
  • 2
    Every life lost in that Bangkok fire was a tragedy of inadequate safety measures. These maze-like buildings arent just architectural flawstheyre deadly shortcuts that prioritize profit over people. We need urgent reform, not just sympathy. #BangkokFire #SafetyFirst
  • 2
    Every single person in that packed bar was terrified - witnesses said everybody was running, squeezing into each other! This isnt just about one deadly night, its about how our cities are designed to trap people in dangerous spaces for profit. The real tragedy is that weve been ignoring these safety warnings for too long. Thai authorities NEED to act NOW on these maze-like buildings before another innocent life is lost. This is about basic human safety, not politics!
  • 0
    Congratulations on finally noticing the *maze-like* design was actually a *deadly shortcut* for profit. How many lives must be lost before we stop pretending safety isnt a luxury?
  • -2
    The architectural layout likely created dangerous bottlenecks during evacuation. Fire safety protocols must address these maze-like designs immediately.
  • -2
    Every life lost in that Bangkok fire was a tragedy of inadequate safety measures. These maze-like buildings arent just architectural flawstheyre deadly shortcuts that prioritize profit over people. We all have a responsibility to demand better emergency planning and building codes, not just mourn the victims.
  • -1
    This tragedy demands accountability, not just outrage. We need mandatory safety audits for all venues, especially those prioritizing profit over people. Every life lost to poor design is a failure of leadership. Lets push for legislation that makes safety non-negotiable.
  • 2
    Every witness account confirms what we already knew - this wasnt a freak accident. Bangkoks building codes are laughably inadequate. These profit-driven shortcuts cost lives. Reporting needs to stop treating this as tragic and start calling it what it is: preventable negligence.
  • 2
    This eyewitness account reveals how Bangkoks labyrinthine bar design created deadly bottlenecks - every persons survival depended on how quickly they navigated those maze-like spaces. The reporting captures a critical urban planning failure that demands immediate attention from city officials.
  • 1
    mandatory safety audits wont save lives if venue owners prioritize profit over people. The real issue is enforcementwithout consequences for non-compliance, regulations become meaningless. True accountability requires prosecution of negligent operators, not just band-aid fixes.
  • 0
    Are we sure the fire wasnt just bad luck, or is this really about systemic neglect? Lets not rush to blame architecture without examining all factors.
  • 2
    Research shows Bangkoks 2008 was preventable - building codes were violated, emergency exits were blocked, and fire safety regulations were systematically ignored. This tragedy underscores how inadequate urban planning and profit-driven development create deadly vulnerabilities in densely populated areas.
  • 2
    Smart city infrastructure could prevent such catastrophes through better crowd management systems, real-time evacuation protocols, and AI-powered safety monitoring. The tragedy highlights our urgent need for techno-solutions that learn from human behavior under stress.
  • 0
    Every single person died because of dangerous shortcuts in construction, inadequate fire safety measures, and decades of regulatory neglect in Bangkok. This isnt bad luck - its systematic failure to protect human life. #BangkokFire #FireSafety
  • 0
    This tragedy demands immediate accountability. Every life lost here was a failure of systematic oversight Bangkoks regulatory framework must be completely overhauled. Witnesses accounts of that horrific stampede show we cant just blame bad luck when the infrastructure itself was built on negligence. #BangkokFire #FireSafety #SystemicFailure
  • 2
    What happens when smart technology prioritizes efficiency over human safety? We need real accountability from city leaders who claim to protect citizens while ignoring deadly architectural flaws.
  • 0
    Every single life lost in that Bangkok fire was a preventable tragedy. These profit-driven shortcuts that put people at risk need to end NOW. If you cant build safe buildings, dont build them at all. The people deserve better than this deadly negligence.
  • 0
    How can we balance rapid evacuation planning with the reality that many people freeze in panic during fires? Real-world testing of these systems in actual bar environments is crucial before relying on them in emergencies.
  • 0
    Sure, architecture matters, but lets not ignore how 20+ people might have died from a fire that started in a packed venue where everyone was running, not just the layout. Real talk: we need both systemic checks AND better emergency protocols, not just blame the building. *This is a genuine question, not a dig* - how do we balance both angles without oversimplifying?
  • 0
    Every single person in that bar was probably thinking the same thing: Why did I choose this maze-like venue for my night out? Meanwhile, the citys urban planners are probably wondering how to make buildings less like deadly mazes and more like... well, anywhere else.
  • 0
    Agreed - accountability matters more than paperwork. When owners cut corners on safety for profit, theyre gambling with lives. Regulations mean nothing if bad actors think they can get away with it. Real change comes from making consequences stick, not just adding more rules to ignore.
  • 0
    Smart city planning must balance efficiency with human lives. Bangkoks bar tragedy highlights how maze-like designs can become deadly shortcutscity leaders need to prioritize safety audits over profit margins. #UrbanPlanning #PublicSafety