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Spanish wildfire victims burnt in cars after roads became death traps

Residents in rural Andalusian towns around Los Gallardos, southern Spain, fled as flames approached and smoke filled the air. Some paid with their lives for this decision. On Friday, firefighters were still battling to put out?one of?Spain's most deadly wildfires. Eleven people have been confirmed dead and 19 others are missing.

Residents of the mountainous area above Los Gallardos were advised to evacuate using a recommended route. Residents of the densely forested Bedar hamlet, meanwhile, were instructed to shelter in place.

Antonio Rubio said that the smoke made it impossible for him to stay in one place as the flames approached.

We left the house at 5 pm on Thursday afternoon. "The fire did not reach my house - it stopped a few feet short of it, but we could see smoke even though it was a distance away. We had to leave," said he. "We left of our own free will." Sonia, an English woman who lives in Los Gallardos and declined to reveal her last name, told reporters that she took in relatives because the authorities had ordered them to evacuate by 7 pm (1700 GMT).

She explained that she was told to take a route up the mountains and avoid the main road out of Bedar. Then, they were instructed to return back down the coast.

She said, "There are many homes in the middle countryside in the mountains. People would take whichever road they could."

The road from Bedar to Los Gallardos had been blocked because the fire had crossed it and made it impassable.

SHELTERING IN PLACE SAFELY SAVED LIFE

Antonio Sanz is the head of emergency services in Andalusia. He said that residents in Bedar were told to either follow the recommended route of evacuation or stay at home because the fire was close. In situations such as this, it's important that everyone follows the directions. "Unfortunately, in this case a decision was made to use a different route which wasn't recommended for evacuation. Finding another route out via a dried riverbed proved to be a trap.

Sanz stated that four people who appeared to be British, as their steering wheel was on the right, died in a vehicle. Seven others were found dead after abandoning their vehicles to run away on foot.

He said that ten of the victims were foreigners, while one Spaniard was confirmed dead.

He added that "the village of Bedar was not affected by flames in many cases, so the order to shelter-in-place avoided a more severe situation."

As authorities searched for the missing and the dead in the early morning hours of Friday, relatives around the world posted messages to social media and local forums.

A woman in the United States sent a message to local emergency services, saying that her brother was among 10 people who had?tried? to escape from a valley near a stream. She shared the coordinates with the emergency services and asked them to look for him.

Juanma Moreno, the?regional president of?Moreno, said that it was understandable for people to want to run away. "When people see a burning building, they run away. They think they are familiar with the routes, but without the correct information, these routes can become deadly traps. Reporting by Corina Poons and Aislinn laing, writing by Aislinn laing; editing by Sharon Singleton

(source: Reuters)