The severity of the loss has led Goa Chief Minister Pramod Sawant to order a magisterial inquiry, while police have registered an FIR against the club’s owner and general managers, issuing arrest warrants
A massive fire at the popular nightclub Birch by Romeo Lane in Arpora, Goa, has killed at least 25 people, including 14 staff members and four tourists. The tragedy, which occurred post-midnight on Sunday, has now shifted focus from rescue efforts to a massive inquiry into the club’s legality, construction violations, and critical safety lapses.
Most victims succumbed to suffocation while desperately trying to escape the blaze. The severity of the loss has led Goa Chief Minister Pramod Sawant to order a magisterial inquiry, while police have registered an FIR against the club’s owner and general managers, issuing arrest warrants.
#WATCH | Goa CM Pramod Sawant visits the spot where 23 people died after a fire broke out at a restaurant in North Goa’s Arpora. pic.twitter.com/H1KBLJ7DjT
— ANI (@ANI) December 6, 2025
As investigations begin, key questions surrounding the cause of the fire and the club’s ability to operate despite alleged violations are being raised.
What caused the fire in the first place?
Conflicting accounts have clouded the exact starting point of the fire.
While the Goa police chief initially cited a cylinder blast as the cause, multiple witnesses dispute this, claiming the fire began on the first floor, where approximately 100 tourists were dancing.
With no official forensic conclusion, the precise trigger that turned the venue into a death trap remains unknown.
Eyewitnesses noted that the presence of temporary construction made up of palm leaves contributed to how quickly the structure caught fire.
#WATCH | Nikhnesh from Delhi, who is visiting Goa, says, “Our flight landed at 10.30 pm last night. So, we reached here around 12 am. As soon as we reached our hostel, we saw plumes of smoke rising. We came to here find out what is happening. Actually, we were planning to come… https://t.co/qSth23gSZe pic.twitter.com/rtNSKRtGix
— ANI (@ANI) December 7, 2025
Why were escape routes ineffective?
Survivors recounted immediate panic and a chaotic struggle to exit. Eyewitnesses described the club as having a “narrow entry, exit” and a confusing layout.
In the melee, many people, including staff, rushed downstairs and became trapped in an unventilated ground-floor kitchen area, leading to the high number of deaths by suffocation.
#WATCH | Goa | Aftermath of the fire that broke out at a restaurant in North Goa’s Arpora, claiming the lives of 23 people. pic.twitter.com/v6qleY5WJX
— ANI (@ANI) December 7, 2025
How did the illegal structure operate?
The establishment’s legality has come under intense scrutiny.
The Arpora-Nagoa sarpanch, Roshan Redkar, confirmed the structure was illegal, stating the local panchayat had issued a demolition notice due to the lack of a construction license.
However, the demolition order was later stayed by the Directorate of Panchayats, allowing the club to continue operating. Furthermore, reports suggest the club was built on eco-sensitive saltpan land within a Coastal Regulation Zone, where construction is banned.
Why was fire service access delayed?
The club’s location in the backwaters, accessible only by a single, narrow route, severely hampered the emergency response.
Fire trucks reportedly had to be parked 400 metres away from the building, resulting in critical delays that may have cost lives. Whether authorities had previously flagged this issue and if the venue should have been allowed to host large crowds under such conditions is now being examined.
Were fire safety norms ignored and unchecked?
Chief Minister Sawant explicitly stated that the nightclub “had not followed the fire safety norms.” The magisterial inquiry is tasked with fixing responsibility for these lapses.
Meanwhile, local politicians have announced that panchayats will now conduct a fire safety audit of all nightclubs and issue notices demanding safety compliance, threatening to cancel licenses for non-compliant venues.
The Prime Minister’s Office has announced an ex gratia of Rs 2 lakh for the next of kin of the deceased, and Rs 50,000 for the injured. The focus now turns to the full findings of the magisterial inquiry to determine who allowed the deadly combination of safety violations and illegal construction to persist.
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