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FIRE

UPDATE: Four dead and 14 missing as fire guts Spanish apartment block

Fire crews on Friday picked through a still-smouldering 14-storey apartment block in Valencia, eastern Spain, a day after a blaze ripped through the building killing four people and leaving at least 14 missing.

UPDATE: Four dead and 14 missing as fire guts Spanish apartment block
Firefighters inspect the aftermath of a huge fire that yesterday raged through a multistorey residential block killing at least four people, in Valencia on February 23, 2024. (Photo by JOSE JORDAN / AFP)

Experts said the building, which contained 138 flats, was covered with highly flammable cladding, which could account for the rapid spread of the blaze after it broke out on the fourth floor at around 5:30 pm on Thursday.

Dramatic images showed clouds of black smoke as the flames consumed the high rise of 138 flats in the Campanar district of the Mediterranean port city.

“Four people have died,” Jorge Suárez Torres, deputy director of emergency services for the Valencia region, told reporters overnight.

“As of now, we have 14 people who remain untraced,” regional administrator Pilar Bernabé added on Friday, stressing that the number could change.

Fifteen people were treated for injuries of varying degrees, including a seven-year-old child and seven firemen, but their lives were not in danger.

Fire crews on Friday entered the blackened ruin of the residential block, which stood dark against the crisp blue sky, its windows blown out and its once-white facade charred with the residue of smoke and flames, an AFP reporter at the scene saw.

Visiting the scene on Friday, Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said the “priority now” is to search for the victims.

He encouraged people to “show empathy, affection and solidarity with the victims, with their families, with those who still do not know exactly what has happened” to their loved ones.

Smoke still wafted from the building though it was quickly blown away by strong gusts of chilly wind, which had fuelled the flames and complicated efforts to quench the blaze.

‘A catastrophe’

Slava Honcharenko, a 31-year-old Ukrainian, said he knew several families of compatriots who lived in the building who had been relocated to a hotel since Thursday night.

“We feel very bad. We know what it is when you lose your house because we experienced this two years ago in Ukraine,” he told AFP.

A huge fire rages through a multistorey residential block in Valencia on February 22, 2024. (Photo by Jose Jordan / AFP)

Spanish media said rescue workers had used drones to locate the bodies of those who perished.

Esther Puchades, deputy head of Valencia’s Industrial Engineers Association (COGITI), told local media the fire had spread so rapidly because the building was covered with highly combustible polyurethane cladding.

The fire, which started in an intermediate floor, spread within minutes to the entire building, according to residents.

Sergio Pérez, a 49-year-old driver who lives nearby, said the building burned as if someone had “poured gasoline” on it. “It’s a catastrophe. Unimaginable. It’s devastating,” he said.

Dramatic rescue

As the fire raged, residents could be seen waiting to be rescued on balconies.

Firefighters used a crane to pluck a father and his daughter from a balcony where they were trapped in an operation broadcast live on national TV. Onlookers cheered and applauded as they were brought to the ground.

Other dramatic footage showed a man jumping several floors onto an inflatable mat to escape the flames.

Valencia has announced three days of mourning and suspended the start of the month-long annual Fallas festival.

Fuastino Yanguas of the Valencia fire brigade said the material used on the facade of the building must be investigated as it “was a factor that contributed a lot” to the lightning spread of the flames, as were the strong winds, with gusts of up to 60 kilometres (40 miles) per hour at the time the blaze broke out.

The fears of polyurethane cladding exacerbating the Valencia fire recalled the 2017 tragedy at London’s Grenfell Tower, when a fire killed 72 people in the 24-storey high rise.

The blaze spread rapidly because of the highly combustible cladding on the block’s outside walls. A public inquiry into the disaster has yet to publish its final report.

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WILDFIRE

Wildfire rages in Spain’s Alicante as temperatures rise

A forest fire that started in abnormally hot temperatures has burned through more than 500 hectares (1,235 acres) near Spain's Costa Blanca and forced 180 people to flee their homes, officials said Monday.

Wildfire rages in Spain's Alicante as temperatures rise

The fire began on Sunday near Tárbena in the Valencia region (Alicante province) as temperatures reached 30 degrees Celcius (86 degrees Fahrenheit), which is unusually high for the season.

Heat, wind and low humidity fuelled the blaze which media reports said may have started with an agricultural fire.

“The fire is still active” after a “complicated” night for firefighters, the region’s emergency services wrote on X, the former Twitter, saying the blaze had destroyed “more than 500 hectares (1,235 acres)” of land.

“Around 180 people have been evacuated” from the two worst-hit areas, Pilar Bernabe, the central government representative in Valencia, told public television.

Eight air units battled the blaze alongside firefighters and troops from the UME military emergency unit which is called in to help with larger fires.

According to the AEMET national weather service, temperatures rose above 30C in more than 65 areas across Spain on Saturday, including places as far north as the Pyrenees, Galicia and the Castilla y Leon region.

Tárbena is about 20 kilometres (12 miles) from the coast, near the coastal resort of Benidorm.

In 2022, some 500 wildfires destroyed huge more than 300,000 hectares of land in Spain, a record in Europe, according to the European Forest Fire Information System (EFFIS).

READ ALSO: Heat records for April already broken across Spain

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