Six people were killed in the explosion and fire that followed and caused the collapse of a residential building in The Hague, in the early hours of last Saturday.
As the Dutch authorities announced, a teenage girl is among the victims. Police have been able to identify four of the six: two men aged 45 and 31, a woman aged 41 and a 17-year-old.
The rescuers are continuously continuing the efforts to locate missing persons and in the early hours of the morning they recovered the sixth body, fearing that they will find more dead people in the ruins, estimating that they will reach at least 20.
Four other people are still in hospital, two of them in serious condition.
Authorities do not know how many people were in the building at the time of the explosion, so it is difficult to know how many bodies may remain in the rubble.
The fire that broke out was so large that identification of the victims is only possible through DNA, which makes the process even more difficult.
Police do not yet know the cause of the explosion, but the attorney general told reporters on Sunday that there were indications, which she did not explain, that it was a criminal act.
Police are particularly keen to speak to the driver of a vehicle which was seen speeding away from the building at 06.15am on Saturday.
A detailed investigation into the cause of the crash will only be able to begin once the search for any other victims found in the rubble is complete, authorities said.