Without giving names, the officials said the dead included two women, aged 21 and 16, and two men, aged 18 and 16.

Mourners continued to gather on Saturday at the street outside Le Constellation, where residents and visitors have laid flowers and officials have updated the media on the investigation.

The Australian government has confirmed that one Australian was injured in the fire, but it has not released the name or location of this individual, nor the scale of the injuries suffered. The government said the individual was being given medical care and their family was receiving consular assistance.

A Melbourne teenager who stays with family in Crans-Montana, Yaron Lavy, told this masthead he did not know any Australians who were in the bar on the night of the fire.

Swiss police have said the injured included more than 70 Swiss nationals and more than 10 each from France and Italy, along with citizens of Serbia, Bosnia, Luxembourg, Belgium, Portugal and Poland.

Many of the injured were in their teens to mid-20s, police said. Authorities planned to look into whether sound-dampening material on the ceiling conformed with regulations and whether the candles were permitted for use in the bar.

Officials said they would also look at other safety measures on the premises, including fire extinguishers and escape routes. The region’s top prosecutor has warned of possible prosecutions if any criminal liability is found.

The Valais region’s top security official, Stéphane Ganzer, told SRF public radio on Saturday that “such a huge accident with a fire in Switzerland means that something didn’t work – maybe the material, maybe the organisation on the spot.”

Swiss authorities have opened an investigation into the managers of the bar.Credit: AP

“Something didn’t work and someone made a mistake, I am sure of that,” he added.

Nicolas Féraud, who heads the Crans-Montana municipality, told RTS radio he was “convinced” checks on the bar had not been lax.

With AP

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