Update: Rescuers were still searching Sunday for survivors of an explosion at a Havana hotel, which officials said killed more than 30 people. Cuban state TV said survivors could be trapped in the basement of the Hotel Saratoga, which blew up Friday. State media reported that 32 people had been killed, while the president's office said the death toll was 26, CNN reports. The office said a gas leak appears to be to blame. "Everything indicates that the explosion was caused by an accident," an official tweet said. Our original story from Friday follows:
A powerful explosion apparently caused by a natural gas leak Friday killed eight people and injured at least 40 when it blew away outer walls from a five-star hotel in the heart of Cuba's capital. No tourists were staying at the 96-room Hotel Saratoga because it was undergoing renovations, Havana Gov. Reinaldo García Zapata told the Communist Party newspaper Granma, the AP reports. "It has not been a bomb or an attack. It is a tragic accident," President Miguel Díaz-Canel, who visited the site, said in a tweet.
Cuba's national health minister, José Ángel Portal, told the AP that hospitals had received about 40 injured people, but estimated that the number could rise as the search continues for people who may be trapped between the debris of the 19th-century structure in the Old Havana neighborhood of the city. Granma reported that local officials said 13 people were missing. An elementary school next to the hotel was evacuated and local news media said no children were hurt. Police cordoned off the area as firefighters and rescue workers toiled inside the wreckage of the hotel, which is about 110 yards from Cuba's Capitol building. The hotel has been used frequently by visiting VIPs and political figures.
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Photographer Michel Figueroa said he was walking past the hotel when "the explosion threw me to the ground, and my head still hurts. ... Everything was very fast." Yazira de la Caridad said the explosion shook her home a block from the hotel: "The whole building moved. I thought it was an earthquake." She added, "I've still got my heart in my hand." Mayiee Pérez said she rushed to the hotel after receiving a call from her husband, Daniel Serra, who works at a foreign exchange shop inside the hotel. She said he told her: "I am fine, I am fine. They got us out." But she was unable to reach him after that.
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