Spain confirms 12 foreigners among 13 wildfire victims

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  • Update Time : Wednesday, July 15, 2026
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A crashed vehicle of Andalusia's emergency firefighting services INFOCA lies overturned amongst the burnt landscape days after a wildfire that killed at least 13 people, in Bedar, near Almeria on July 13, 2026. Three Britons and one national each from France, Belgium and Spain are among the 13 victims of one of the deadliest Spanish wildfires in recent times, authorities said on July 13 2026. The blaze that broke out on July 9, 2026, has transformed picturesque rural settlements into ghost towns and left a trail of destruction in the southeastern province of Almeria, home to many foreign residents near the Mediterranean coast. The authorities have cautioned that the number of missing people remains uncertain until autopsies and the identification of bodies are completed.  (Photo by JORGE GUERRERO / AFP)

Twelve of the 13 victims of a deadly wildfire that swept through Andalusia in southern Spain were foreign nationals, the authorities said on Tuesday after completing post-mortem examinations.

In a statement, officials said seven were from the United Kingdom, three from Belgium, and one each from France and the United States. The last victim was a Spanish citizen.

‘The 13 people who died are eight women and five men, all adults,’ the public body responsible for identifying the victims added.

Fire broke out last Thursday in the picturesque southeastern province of Almeria, which is home to many foreign residents near the Mediterranean coast.

Flames fanned by high winds ripped through forests and scrubland made tinderbox dry by extreme high temperatures, turning picturesque rural settlements into ghost towns.

Emergency services initially recovered 12 bodies that were so badly burned that DNA samples were needed to identify them.

The fire, one of Spain’s deadliest in recent years and caused by an electrical cable falling on a road, devastated some 7,000 hectares (more than 17,000 acres) of land.

The fire has since been brought under control and residents have been able to return to their homes since Sunday.

Spain has in recent years experienced increasingly long and frequent heatwaves, with temperatures exceeding 40C, creating perfect conditions for wildfires.

In 2025, more than 393,000 hectares were destroyed by fire, according to the European Forest Fire Information System — the most in Spain’s recent history.

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