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A four-year-old girl has become the second child to die from the wounds of last week’s tragedy, with an air castle where children played in Spain.
As in the even more tragic case a month ago in Australia, the Spanish holiday castle in Mislata soared into the air from a sudden strong wind on January 4 as children played in it.
An eight-year-old child died the day after the accident, while the four-year-old became the second victim today.
Police said they are investigating to see if the trampoline castle met safety criteria.
The father of the four-year-old girl said she had a smile “that will never go away”.
Seven other children were injured when the air-inflated rubber band lifted into the air from the sudden wind throwing several people to the ground.
The parents of the first girl who died, who was named Cayetana, have started legal proceedings saying that the tragic death could have been prevented, write the Spanish media.
Their son was also playing in the air castle at the time of the incident but was not seriously injured.
“I, as a father, do not know what to say about what happened. “Life can sometimes be very unfair and no mother or father can be prepared for this pain,” Cayetana’s father said in a letter to the local daily Valencian.
Last month six children died in a similar tragic situation when a sudden wind blew up the giant air castle as children played in it celebrating the end of the school semester in Tasmania.
Authorities are expected to tighten safety and wind incident prevention rules for those who supply, purchase or rent such vehicles.
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