News September 10, 2021

Family spokesperson says 'their world is shattered' after 6-year-old dies at amusement park

WATCH: Young girl killed in amusement park tragedy

A friend of the family of a 6-year-old girl who died tragically at a Colorado amusement park is speaking out.

"This is a parent's worst nightmare and something you don't wish on your worst enemy," Bementayehu Mekonnen, a spokesperson for the Estifanos family, told "Good Morning America" Friday. "Their world shattered. One moment they are in denial. The next minute they are trying to plead with God to bring her back. They are bargaining with him. They are angry."

Estifanos Family
Wongel Estifanos is seen here in an undated file photo.

The Estifanos lost their daughter Wongel in a fatal accident Sunday at Glenwood Caverns Adventure Park, located atop Iron Mountain in Glenwood Springs, about 60 miles west of Vail.

The incident occurred shortly before 8 p.m. local time Sunday.

Glenwood Springs Post Independent via AP, File
The Haunted Mine Drop in a July 2017 photo at Glenwood Caverns Adventure Park in Glenwood Springs, Colo. The Haunted Mine Drop is billed as the first drop ride to go underground, plunging riders 110 feet inside of Iron Mountain. An investigation is underway after a 6-year-old girl on vacation with her family died, Sept. 5, 2021, on the Haunted Mine Drop ride.

Wongel was fatally injured while riding on the Haunted Mine Drop ride -- which plunges riders 110 feet down a pitch-black tunnel in seconds -- the Garfield County Coroner's Office said.

Investigators are still working to determine what led to the girl's death, but 911 dispatch calls stated that "the ride was in operation when the child fell from it -- approximately 110 feet."

Employees of the amusement park administered first aid until paramedics arrived, the coroner's office said in a statement.

"We are deeply saddened and ask that you please keep the family of the deceased in your thoughts and prayers," Glenwood Caverns Adventure Park told ABC News in a statement.

VIDEO: Young girl killed in amusement park tragedy

The Colorado Department of Labor and Employment said the ride was inspected in June and has passed inspections since it opened in 2017.

Mekonnen said the family is determined to enact change in their daughter's name.

"They wouldn't want anyone to go through what they are going through right now, so they're going to do everything they can to make sure this never happens again -- even through her death, she's going to make a difference," Mekonnen said.