National District declares municipal mourning for Jet Set tragedy anniversary

One year after one of the deadliest structural disasters in the Dominican Republic’s recent history, the capital’s local government is honoring the lives lost as survivors and victims’ families continue to push for accountability.

The Mayor’s Office of the Dominican Republic’s National District has officially enacted a period of municipal mourning to mark the first anniversary of the Jet Set tragedy, which falls on April 8. The declaration of mourning was formally approved by the local City Council via Ordinance 7-2026, and requires all municipal facilities to fly national and civic flags at half-staff for the duration of the commemoration.

Official data from the Dominican Public Prosecutor’s Office confirms the disaster claimed 236 lives and left more than 100 people with injuries, a staggering toll that has continued to shape collective grief across the country over the past 12 months.

To accommodate community-led remembrance events, local authorities have announced a temporary traffic closure on a key stretch of Santo Domingo’s Independencia Avenue. The section running between San Juan Bautista Street and Núñez de Cáceres Avenue will be closed to vehicles and pedestrians from April 6 through April 9, clearing space for private vigils, interfaith religious ceremonies, and other commemorative activities organized by surviving victims and the families of those who died.

As the nation pauses to grieve, the legal process surrounding the collapse remains ongoing. Presiding Judge Raymundo Mejía recently ordered an independent technical investigation to pinpoint the exact structural and regulatory causes of the disaster, a move aimed at resolving lingering questions about what led to the collapse. At the same time, a large portion of victims and their families have exited the formal legal process after reaching confidential settlement agreements with parties deemed liable for the tragedy.

In a public official statement released ahead of the anniversary, municipal and national authorities reiterated their solidarity with all communities impacted by the disaster. Twelve months on, the tragedy still leaves deep emotional and social scars on survivors and bereaved relatives, while widespread calls for full transparency and justice remain a prominent demand across Dominican society.