Audio By Carbonatix
At least 13 people have died in a fire that engulfed three nightclubs in the south-eastern Spanish city of Murcia.
The blaze broke out in the Fonda Milagros nightclub - known as La Fonda - early on Sunday morning.
It then spread to neighbouring clubs as patrons rushed to escape the packed dancefloors, police said.
Local media reported that family members celebrating a birthday were among the dead.
One of the birthday party attendees - who was at the club with his cousins and aunt - said he returned home during the chaos, only to be told that one of his cousins had not left, La Verdad de Murcia newspaper reported.
It is not clear if the cousin was among those confirmed dead.
Police have confirmed that all of those who died were at La Fonda, but added 14 people were still unaccounted for. They warned the number of deaths would probably rise.
The club is located in the Atalayas area in Murcia, and the fire is believed to have started at around 06:00 (04:00 GMT).
Nearly 15 hours on, it is still not clear what caused it. But Murcia's Mayor Jose Ballesta told reporters earlier in the day that the fire had broken out on the first floor of the club.
Diego Seral, of the national police, said the roof of La Fonda had collapsed, which was making it challenging to locate victims and work out what had happened.

A 28-year-old woman sent a voice note to her mother when the fire had started, according to the La Verdad de Murcia newspaper, saying: "Mummy, I love you, we're going to die."
She had gone out with her partner and some friends from the nearby town of Caravaca de la Cruz. It is not clear if she survived.
"They went because in Caravaca there are no nightclubs," the woman's father, named as Jairo, told the paper. "It was the second time she had been."
Four people are being treated in hospital for smoke inhalation, and a local sports venue is being used to provide counselling for those affected.
"We are devastated," Murcia Mayor Jose Ballesta said. He has decreed three days of mourning in Murcia.
This is believed to be the country's worst nightclub fire in more than 30 years. In 1990, 43 people were killed in a blaze in a venue in Zaragoza.

Latest Stories
-
Indonesians raise white flags as anger grows over slow flood aid
1 hour -
Why passport stamps may be a thing of the past
1 hour -
Pope Leo urges ‘courage’ to end Ukraine war in first Christmas address
2 hours -
Commentary on Noah Adamtey v Attorney General: A constitutional challenge to Office of Special Prosecutor
2 hours -
Ghana’s democratic debate is too insular and afraid of change – Constitution Review Chair
2 hours -
24/7 campaigning is a choice, not democracy – Constitution Review Chair
2 hours -
4 years is too short as Ghana lags behind global democratic standards – Constitution Review Chair
3 hours -
GOLDBOD CEO explains ‘Clear Typo’ in Foreign Reserves claim
5 hours -
Trump says US military struck ISIS terrorists in Nigeria
5 hours -
Civil society group calls on BoG to suspend planned normalisation of non-interest banking
7 hours -
King Charles’ Christmas message urges unity in divided world
7 hours -
Jingle bills: Arkansas Powerball player strikes $1.8bn jackpot on Christmas Eve
7 hours -
Brazil ex-President Jair Bolsonaro’s surgery for hernia ‘successful’
8 hours -
Ghana and Afreximbank announce successful resolution of $750 million facility
11 hours -
IGP inaugurates Ghana Police Music Academy
11 hours
