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Spain identifies six victims of deadly wildfire

July 13, 2026 10:51 AM EDT

A screengrab from video shows the remains of burned-out cars used by people who died while trying to escape deadly wildfires affecting Almeria province, according to Spain's Guardia Civil, in Bedar, Almeria, Spain, July 10, 2026. Atlas via REUTERS

By Nina Lopez and ‌Emma Pinedo

BEDAR, Spain ​July ​13 (Reuters) - Six victims of one of Spain's deadliest wildfires on record have been identified, authorities said on Monday, as ‌forensic teams continued efforts to confirm the identities of six ⁠others through DNA analysis.

The victims include a married couple from Spain and Britain, authorities ‌said. The other identified victims ‌are a British man and woman, a French woman and a Belgian man. All were adults.

A seventh identified victim was a 93-year-old ​British woman, who died in hospital on Sunday from burn injuries, bringing the death toll to 13. Seven other people were injured ⁠in the blaze, which has scorched about 7,000 hectares (17,300 acres).

Spain's deadliest wildfire in more than four ​decades trapped residents in a rugged area with scattered homes as they attempted to escape the flames on Thursday ​night.

Spain and much of Southern Europe ‌face increasingly severe wildfire seasons that scientists have linked to climate change. Experts say unusually heavy spring rainfall this ⁠year spurred vegetation growth across parts of southern Spain, creating abundant fuel that later dried out in extreme summer heat, helping the fire spread rapidly.

Officials ⁠expect the remaining six victims to be identified in the coming days after relatives ​provided biological samples, with assistance from Belgian, British and French consular authorities. Authorities say 10 people are still missing, although some of those could be among the ‌bodies not yet identified.

Investigators said DNA analysis remains the only viable primary identification method because of the condition ‌of the remains.

Andalusia's regional government on Monday lowered the wildfire alert to ⁠the pre-emergency phase after the ‌blaze was stabilised, evacuation ​orders lifted and residents were allowed to return to their homes.

(Reporting by Emma Pinedo; editing by Charlie Devereux and ‌Hugh Lawson)



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