Mexico’s hotel gas blast probed

Papers, boxes, among other debris are pictured on the lawn at the site of an explosion at a hotel in Cancun. At least five Canadian tourists and two workers were killed in the gas explosion at the hotel in the beach resort of Playa del Carmen on Mexico's Caribbean coast. A child was among the dead and about 15 to 20 people were injured. Photo: Reuters

Papers, boxes, among other debris are pictured on the lawn at the site of an explosion at a hotel in Cancun. At least five Canadian tourists and two workers were killed in the gas explosion at the hotel in the beach resort of Playa del Carmen on Mexico's Caribbean coast. A child was among the dead and about 15 to 20 people were injured. Photo: Reuters

Published Nov 16, 2010

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Mexico prepared to turn the bodies of five Canadian tourists over to their relatives as six people recovered from wounds suffered in a mysterious blast at a Caribbean coast hotel, where inspectors from the army, navy and civil defense agencies combed through the rubble looking for clues in the accident that also killed two Mexican hotel employees. Experts and officials differed over whether the sprawling luxury hotel complex was in fact a palm-fringed Caribbean coastal time bomb, accumulating swamp gas since it was built four years ago over a mangrove thicket.

Quintana Roo state attorney general Francisco Alor said investigators believe the explosion at the Grand Riviera Princess resort was produced by gases from rotting vegetable matter or waste trapped beneath the ground floor of the building where the blast occurred.

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