Ayia Napa: The hotel is involved in a work accident

a 3 Accident, Nea Famagusta

A 34-year-old man, who lost his balance and fell into the void of an unguarded balcony veranda of about 3,5 meters, of a hotel in Agia Na, is being treated in the ventilator, in the Intensive Care Unit of the General Hospital of Nicosia, yesterday.

According to information from KYPE, the management of the hotel denies that the man worked there, while, on the contrary, there are indications from his family environment that bring him to work in the specific establishment for three months.

Police continue to take statements in order to clarify the case and are essentially investigating whether it is a work accident, while information speaks of a possible case of undeclared work.

It is recalled that yesterday morning, the Ayia Napa Police Station was informed about an accident that occurred in a hotel in the area.

According to the information, around nine in the morning, while a 34-year-old man from Ayia Napa, who was working on the first floor of a hotel under renovation in Ayia Napa, under conditions under investigation, seems to have lost his balance, as a result of which he fell from an unguarded terrace balcony in a vacuum from a height of 3,5 meters and injure his head.

The 34-year-old was transported by ambulance to a private clinic in Ayia Napa, however, due to the seriousness of the condition, he was transported to Famagusta General Hospital.

The doctors, who performed all the necessary examinations, found that the man had a skull fracture with cerebral hemorrhage and a vertebral fracture.

Due to the seriousness of his condition, the man was admitted to the General Hospital of Nicosia, where he is being treated in a serious but stable condition.

Members of the Police and an inspector of the Labor Inspection Office went to the scene of the accident and conducted examinations for the conditions under which he fell from the first floor of the hotel.

The causes of the accident are being investigated by the Ayia Napa Police Station, in collaboration with the Labor Office.

Source: KYPE