Andalusia wildfire: at least 12 dead and 19 missing in the region's worst fire on record
The Andalusia wildfire in Almería province has killed at least 12 people, with 19 still missing. The fire has burned over 3,000 hectares of scattered housing and scrubland.
At least 12 people have died and around twenty remain unaccounted for in the wildfire that has been tearing through Almería province, in south-eastern Spain, since Thursday. Andalusian authorities are already calling it the deadliest fire in the region’s history — and just a few hundred kilometres from the Portuguese border, it lands as a warning in a summer when the whole Iberian Peninsula is baking.
Where did the Andalusia wildfire break out?
The fire started on Thursday around Los Gallardos, an area of rugged terrain, ravines and isolated homes scattered through bone-dry scrubland, and spread fast enough to catch residents mid-escape. In little more than a day it burned through over 3,000 hectares — roughly four thousand football pitches — and around 500 firefighters are still on the ground fighting the flames and searching for the missing. Official emergency updates are being coordinated by the regional government of Andalusia.
What is known about the victims?
Beyond the 12 confirmed dead, at least eight people are injured and 19 are still missing, a figure that was reported as higher at points during the day. Many victims appear to be foreign residents: four bodies were found in a right-hand-drive car, leading authorities to believe they were British — the area is known for its scattered developments of northern European retirees. Some died in their cars; others were caught trying to flee along routes the emergency services had warned against.
The scene is painfully familiar on this side of the border. Portugal is living through its own maximum-risk days, with the state of alert extended into next week and the whole country watching the thermometer. What Almería shows is how quickly a fire in an area of scattered housing turns into tragedy — and why the instructions to leave early, by the right roads, are not bureaucracy.
Image: Miguillen This picture was made for the Taller de Heráldi… / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)