ALMERIA, SPAIN (REUTERS)

Twelve people were killed in a wildfire in Almeria ​in southern Spain, with 150 firefighters working to put out the blaze, the Emergency Agency of Andalucía ⁠said early on Friday.

Minister of the Presidency, Health, and ​Emergencies, Antonio Sanz, called the fire "the most ​devastating ‌fire to date in ⁠our region" ​and described the situation as an "unprecedented tragedy."

Earlier, there were reports of six deaths from the wildfire.

"Our deepest condolences to the families ‌of the six people who lost their lives ‌in the Los Gallardos and the affection from all of us to the municipalities affected ​by the fire," Juanma Moreno, the leader of Spain's southern Andalusia region, wrote in a post on X.

Los Gallardos is a municipality of the Almería province ‌in Spain's southern region of ​Andalusia.

The blaze comes after a wildfire burning out of control in southern France earlier this week forced the evacuation of over 10,000 ​people from ‌two ⁠dozen small ‌towns and villages ‌near the Spanish border.

Early summer heatwaves across western Europe in May and ⁠June have parched vast areas of land, ​making them particularly vulnerable to wildfires this year.

Europe is warming at more than twice the global average, the World Meteorological Organisation has said, making prolonged heat episodes increasingly likely.