The death toll from the attacks in Barcelona and Cambrils on Thursday stands at 15, although scores more were injured, many of them seriously.

Here is what we know about the victims who have been identified so far:

Julian Cadman, British-Australian dual national

Julian Cadman

The family of the seven-year-old boy confirmed on Sunday afternoon that he was one of the 13 people killed in the Las Ramblas attack.



Julian had been reported missing after becoming separated from his mother, who was badly injured when a van drove into pedestrians in central Barcelona. It is understood that she is in a serious condition in hospital.



Family members shared pictures of Julian in an attempt to locate him, while his father and grandmother were understood to have arrived in Spain on Saturday after travelling from Australia.

The boy’s father, Andrew Cadman, landed on Saturday afternoon to comfort his seriously injured wife, Jumarie, known as Jom. It is understood she was in the area to attend a family wedding when she and her son were struck by the terrorist’s van.

The Spanish missing persons bureau said in a statement: “Julian Cadman’s family has told us he is unfortunately one of the victims of the attack and has asked us to thank all the people who have spread the news.

“In these very unjust, hard and painful moments, we accompany Julian’s family and friends. Rest in peace. Once again we wish to reiterate our appreciation and involvement in your search.”

Jared Tucker, United States

Jared Tucker with his wife, Heidi Nunes.

Tucker, 42, had left his wife for a moment shortly before the attack started. The couple, from Walnut Creek, California, were on a tour of Europe to celebrate their first wedding anniversary. They had been enjoying drinks on a pavement cafe on Las Ramblas.

“Next thing I know there’s screaming, yelling,” his wife Heidi Nunes, 40, told NBC News after she failed to find her husband after the attack. “I got pushed inside the souvenir kiosk and stayed there hiding while everybody kept running by, screaming.”

On Friday night his family said that Nunes had identified his body. His father, Daniel Tucker, who worked with his son in the family’s pool business, told the New York Daily News: “It’s something we really just don’t understand. I don’t know what else to say.”

Bruno Gulotta, Italy

Bruno Gulotta. Photograph: Tom's Hardware

Gulotta died on the street in front of his son Alessandro and wife Martina, Italian media reported.

Martina, who was carrying their one-year-old daughter, Aria, in a sling-style baby-carrier, told friends that she had pulled Alessandro to safety at the last moment.

The family were on holiday in the Catalan city.

Gulotta worked in sales and marketing for computer company Tom’s Hardware. The company said his violent death had left his wife facing “trials no one should have to bear”.

“We put ourselves in the shoes of little Alessandro, who is about to start elementary school knowing his and his family’s life will never be the same again. And we think of baby Aria … who will never know her dad,” his colleagues said in a statement.

Luca Russo, Italy

Luca Russo and his girlfriend Marta Scomazzon Photograph: Facebook

Russo, 25, was on holiday with his girlfriend, Marta Scomazzon, who is among three injured Italians, having suffered fractures in the attack.

Scomazzon, whose parents have travelled to Barcelona to be with her, told the Italian news agency Ansa: “We were walking together and then the van hit us. I fell and realised that Luca wasn’t there any more. I didn’t see him again. His body was swept away.”

Russo’s sister Chiara posted images on Facebook of her smiling brother, alongside those of his body lying on the ground in Barcelona. “Help to bring him home, I beg you,’’ she wrote.

He had graduated last year in engineering and had just started his first job. He was from Marostica, a town in the northern Veneto region.

“Italy will remember Bruno Gulotta and Luca Russo and expresses its solidarity with their families,” the prime minister, Paolo Gentiloni, said in a tweet. “Freedom will triumph over barbarism and terrorism.”

Elke Vanbockrijck, Belgium

Elke Vanbockrijck Photograph: AP

Vanbockrijck, 44, was reported to have been in the city on holiday with her husband and two sons, aged 11 and 14. Patrick Dewael, the mayor of Tongeren in Belgium, told Belgian radio that he had presided over her wedding in 2014.

Vanbockrijck regularly ferried her sons to football practice at KFC Heur Tongeren. A statement from the club said: “She was often at the club, and was committed to our club. We will always remember her as a happy woman, a caring mother and loving wife. Elke will be missed.”

Francisco López Rodríguez, Spain

Francisco López Rodríguez with his wife, who was seriously injured

Rodríguez, 57, was the first Spanish victim to be named in the Barcelona attack.

He was originally from Granada and had been walking along Las Ramblas with his wife, who was seriously injured, her niece and the niece’s two children, one of whom was also killed (see below).

El País reported that Rodríguez worked as a metal worker in Rubi and had been walking back from Barcelona port area when the van burst onto Las Ramblas.

“We are a broken family,” niece Raquel Baron Lopez posted on Twitter.

Javier Martinez, Spain

Javier was the three-year-old grand-nephew of Rodríguez, who was also killed (see above).



Pepita Codina, Spain

Pepito Codina

Codina’s death was announced by the mayor of Sant Hipòlit de Voltregà, a small town near Barcelona where she was from. Xavier Vilamala posted messages of condolence to the family of the 75-year-old on Twitter and Instagram.



Sara Sanchez Crosas, who said she was Codina’s hairdresser, also posted about the news of her death on Facebook, saying: “The angels await you.”

Ian Moore Wilson, Canada

Valerie Wilson with her husband Ian Moore Wilson, who died in the Barcelona terror attack Photograph: Vancouver Police Department/PA

Wilson was on holiday in Barcelona with his wife of 53 years, Valerie.

Their daughter, Fiona, a staff sergeant in the Vancouver police department, issued a brief statement on Friday hailing the efforts of bystanders and emergency workers who cared for her mother and tried to save her father’s life, and thanking those who had offered their sympathy and support.

She said: “In the midst of this tragedy, my dad would want those around him to focus on the extraordinary acts of human kindness that our family has experienced over the past several days, and that is exactly what we intend to do.”

Sgt Wilson described her father as “compassionate, generous, adventurous, and always game for a lively debate, a good book, exploring new places, and a proper-sized pint”.

Ana María Suárez, Spain



Ana María Suárez was the sole fatality of the attack in the seaside resort of Cambrils.



The 61-year-old, from Zaragoza, north-east Spain, was with her husband and sister, who were both injured in the attack.



The Spanish royal family’s Twitter account confirmed her death, offering their thoughts to her family.

Nuestro afecto para la familia de Ana María Suárez, fallecida en el atentado de Cambrils. Y nuestro deseo de recuperación para los heridos. — Casa de S.M. el Rey (@CasaReal) August 18, 2017

Carmen Lopardo, Italy

Carmen Lopardo

Lopardo, 80, and apparently the oldest person to die in the attack, was among three Italians killed in Barcelona, according to Italy’s foreign ministry.

News reports said Lopardo was an Italian who had immigrated to Argentina in 1950 and was visiting Barcelona.

Silvina Alejandra Pereyra, Argentinian-Spanish dual national

Silvina Pereyra’s death was confirmed by family members. Photograph: Facebook

Pereyra, 40, was killed in Barcelona, Argentina’s foreign ministry confirmed. She grew up in Buenos Aires but had lived in Barcelona for over 10 years.

Her death was confirmed by family members living in Bolivia after a cousin identified her body at a morgue in Barcelona.

Pau Pérez, Spain

Pérez, from Vilafranca del Penedes, 40 miles from Barcelona, was named on 21 August as the person found fatally stabbed in a Ford Focus just hours after the Las Ramblas attack. Pérez was killed by the Las Ramblas van driver, and his vehicle used as a getaway car.

Two unnamed Portuguese nationals

The names of a grandmother and granddaughter from Portugal have not been released.