“Several” dozens dead in fire at bar in Switzerland on New Year’s Day, police say

LONDON – “Several” dozen people are presumed dead and about 100 more injured early on New Year’s Day when a fire ripped through a popular bar in a tourist town in the Swiss Alps, police said.
A fire of “undetermined origin” broke out in the Le Constellation bar in Crans-Montana around 01:30 local time, the Valais cantonal police said in a statement.

Rescuers and firefighters work at the site of an explosion that leveled a bar in Crans-Montana on January 1, 2026.
Maxime Schmid/AFP via Getty Images
Investigators were working Thursday to determine the cause of the fire, authorities said during a morning news conference. The incident is not being investigated as an attack, they added.
“A large contingent of police, firefighters and rescue personnel immediately rushed to the scene to assist the numerous victims,” police said in their earlier statement.

Rescuers are seen at the site of an explosion that leveled a bar in Crans-Montana, Switzerland, on January 1, 2026.
Maxime Schmid/AFP via Getty Images
Authorities described the emergency response as “significant” and added that the area near the Alpine bar had been closed to the public.
A no-fly zone was established over Crans-Montana, police said in their statement. The resort town is popular with skiers and is located in the Sierre district of southern Switzerland in the canton of Valais.

Police officers walk at the scene of a fire that destroyed a bar in Crans-Montana, in the canton of Valais, Switzerland, on January 1, 2026.
Maxime Schmid/AFP via Getty Images
Police have not released the identities of those who died in the fire. Authorities said Thursday that it was likely, given the area’s popularity among travelers, that some of the dead were tourists who had traveled to the Alpine city to celebrate New Year’s Eve.
The French Foreign Ministry said in a statement that at least two French citizens were among the injured. French officials were “in constant contact with the Swiss authorities in case other citizens were affected,” the ministry said.
ABC News’ Tom Soufi-Burridge contributed to this report.




