Authorities said many of the victims may be foreign tourists visiting Bedar, a small whitewashed village in Los Gallardos district, but that they were still confirming their identities.They described victims trying to flee the fast-moving blaze through difficult, forested terrain, in one of Spain's deadliest wildfires in recent years.Located about 15 kilometres (nine miles) from Spain's Mediterranean coast, Bedar is popular with foreign residents and tourists seeking a quieter alternative to the nearby beach resorts.

Authorities said the fire had killed 11 people © Handout / INFOCA/AFP

The head of the regional government of Andalusia, Juan Manuel Moreno Bonilla, said four of the people who died were travelling in a right-hand drive car."They appear to have been British nationals and were burned to death inside the car," he told Spanish radio, adding at least 19 people were still unaccounted for.Bedar mayor Angel Francisco Collado said he urged some residents to flee their homes, "even those who did not want to leave".However seven people died while trying to escape on foot and two others were taken to hospital, he added.Scientists agree that climate change caused by humans burning fossil fuels is making extreme weather events such as heatwaves more likely and more intense.Winds fan flamesAbout 500 firefighters and troops battled the inferno northeast of Almeria in the southern Andalusia region which witnesses said may have been started by a power line that fell and set scrub land on fire.It erupted as temperatures across heat-battered Spain and France were predicted to hit 40C on Friday, with forest fires blazing in both countries."At the moment, we have confirmed that 11 people have lost their lives in the Los Gallardos fire; there are no words for such grief," Antonio Sanz, the Andalusia region's minister for emergencies, said in a video posted on X.