A comprehensive update on the New Year's fire tragedy in Crans-Montana. The death toll has tragically risen to 41, with 23 people still in Swiss hospitals. The ongoing investigation has seen Italy request legal assistance and later recall its ambassador after a Swiss court released the bar's owner, creating diplomatic tensions.

"For us, 2026 doesn’t exist. Everything has been at a standstill since New Year’s Eve."
"The death toll from the fire at Le Constellation bar on January 1, 2026 has now risen to 41."
The tragedy in Crans-Montana has deepened, with the death toll now hitting a staggering 41. Authorities confirmed on Sunday that an 18-year-old Swiss national succumbed to his injuries in a Zurich hospital, marking a grim milestone exactly one month after the inferno consumed Le Constellation bar. This latest fatality underscores the catastrophic scale of the New Year's Eve disaster, which has already claimed the lives of 23 Swiss nationals and 18 foreigners, including teenagers from Italy, France, and beyond.
The Wallis canton's public prosecutor, Beatrice Pilloud, delivered the sobering update, stating simply that the toll had risen. The victims, primarily young revelers aged 14 to 39, were caught in a blaze that investigators believe ignited when champagne sparklers set fire to ceiling sound insulation. As the Alpine Ski World Cup proceeds in the resort in a decidedly muted fashion, the community remains paralyzed by grief. The sheer loss of life has turned a season of celebration into a national trauma, with flags at half-mast and a silence that hangs heavier than the winter snow.
A judicial decision has ignited a fierce diplomatic row, causing relations between Bern and Rome to plummet to a new low. Italy has recalled its ambassador to Switzerland in a dramatic protest after a Swiss court released Jacques Moretti, the owner of the ill-fated bar, on bail for CHF 200,000. The move has sparked fury in Italy, where Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni expressed "indignation" at the release of a man suspected of bearing responsibility for a fire that killed six Italian teenagers.
The tension is palpable. Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani slammed the court's ruling as a "grave affront" to the victims' families, citing the risk of flight and evidence tampering. While the Wallis prosecutor, Beatrice Pilloud, insists she will not yield to political pressure, the recall of a top diplomat signals a severe rupture. Switzerland's Foreign Minister Ignazio Cassis is now scrambling to defuse the situation, emphasizing shared mourning, but Rome has made it clear: the ambassador will not return until they see "effective judicial cooperation."
The legal machinery is grinding forward with unprecedented international involvement. In a historic move, Switzerland has granted Italy mutual legal assistance, making it the first and only foreign nation to gain access to the sensitive investigation files. This allows Italian magistrates to directly review evidence as they pursue their own criminal proceedings for the Italian nationals killed in the blaze. The cooperation aims to quell the rising diplomatic fury and ensure transparency in a case that spans borders.
Four individuals are currently in the crosshairs of the criminal investigation: the bar's co-owners, the municipality's head of public safety, and a former fire safety officer. Prosecutors are meticulously reconstructing the events of that night, focusing on the fatal interaction between pyrotechnics and flammable soundproofing. With technical meetings between Swiss and Italian authorities scheduled for mid-February, the pressure is on the Wallis public prosecutor's office to deliver answers. The probe is no longer just a local matter; it is a test of the Swiss judicial system under the glare of the international spotlight.
Beyond the political maneuvering, a grim human reality persists in burn units across Europe. Nearly 70 victims remain hospitalized, fighting for their lives and futures. In Switzerland alone, 23 patients are still receiving critical care in Zurich, Lausanne, and Sion. The situation is equally dire abroad, with 44 victims airlifted to specialized centers in France, Italy, Germany, and Belgium. The road to recovery is agonizingly slow; patients face years of surgeries, skin grafts, and compression suits.
"For us, 2026 doesn’t exist," says Lionel Aubrun, whose son was severely burned. His haunting words capture the suspended animation of families whose lives were shattered in an instant. Parents are keeping vigil by bedsides, some relocating to foreign cities to be near their children, while others grapple with the psychological trauma of the "loud yet quiet" crisis rooms. As the physical wounds are treated, the psychological scars on the survivors and the nation are only just beginning to form.