At least 154 people have died in the last 45 years in fires in nightclubs and nightclubs in Spain.

MADRID, 1 Oct. (EUROPA PRESS) –

The fire that this morning affected several nightclubs in the Atalayas area of ??Murcia is the deadliest recorded in Spain in a leisure venue since the tragedy in 1990 at the ‘Flying’ nightclub in Zaragoza, where 43 people died.

In total, at least 154 people have died in the last 45 years in fires in nightclubs and nightclubs in Spain.

The fire in ‘La Fonda’ in Murcia broke out around six in the morning and spread to several neighboring premises such as ‘Teatre’ and ‘Golden’. Once the flames were put out, the lifeless bodies of at least 13 people were found in the premises, although it is not ruled out that there may be more fatalities.

The greatest tragedy experienced in a nightclub in Spain took place at the ‘Alcalá 20’ nightclub in Madrid, on December 17, 1983, when a fire that started behind the curtains of the venue’s stage killed 81 people.

After the incident in Madrid in 1983, the fire at the ‘Flying’ nightclub in Zaragoza was recorded in 1990, where 43 people lost their lives due to gas inhalation.

In Barcelona, ??a fire also took place in the ‘Scala’ nightclub, which left four people dead in 1978, and a year later, in Ubrique (Cádiz), a venue caught fire, leaving six dead and ten injured.

In Madrid, also in 1979, a fire at the ‘Charada’ nightclub caused the death of four people, while in 1983, more than 80 people lost their lives in the fire at the ‘Alcalá 20’ nightclub. Five years later, in the ‘Dickens’ pub in Vitoria, three people lost their lives in a fire.

In 1992, four people lost their lives in the ‘Miami Club’ tragedy in Barcelona, ??and in 1996, in Valladolid four people died in the fire at the ‘Siete Seven’ nightclub in Valladolid.

Already in the 21st century, two people lost their lives in the fire of the local ‘La nuit de la nuit’, located on the N-IV highway, in Valdepeñas (Ciudad Real), while this year, three people died and a dozen were injured in a fire that occurred at ‘Burro Canaglia’, a restaurant in Madrid.