At least 16 people were electrocuted when a power line fell
atop a packed pre-Carnival street parade in rural Brazil,
police say.
Witnesses reported a high-voltage power line sparked and fell
on the dancing crowd after it was hit by metallic streamers
commonly tossed during Brazil's Carnival or by fireworks,
police said, though the cause remained under investigation.
"We have at least 16 dead, among them teenagers," said a
police spokesman in the town of Bandeira do Sul in Minas
Gerais state, north of Rio de Janeiro, where the accident
happened on Sunday night (local time).
"Most were hit by the line but it's possible the current
passed from person to person because the crowd was so dense."
At least 54 other people were injured, some severely. Shortly
after the accident, police said 17 people died, but they
reduced that figure after conferring with hospitals and
morgues where victims were taken.
The partygoers were following a sound truck that was booming
music when the accident happened in front of the town's main
plaza. Such street parties are common across Brazil in the
days before and during Carnival, which officially opens on
Friday.
Television footage showed dazed people milling about the
darkened square - the accident knocked out electricity and
phone service to the entire town for at least six hours, the
police spokesman said on condition of anonymity as he was not
authorised to discuss the case.
It is at least the third tragedy to hit Brazil's Carnival
festivities this year.
On February 20, a 21-year-old woman in Rio de Janeiro died
after falling 4m from a Carnival sound truck in front of
Copacabana beach, striking her head on the pavement.
On February 7, a fire roared through warehouses in central
Rio de Janeiro where major samba groups construct their
massive floats, costumes and props used during the city's
elaborate parades televised across the nation. No deaths were
reported in the blaze, but it destroyed months of work and
caused millions of dollars in damage for three of the samba
groups.
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