Authorities in Almeria said on Monday that a British national and a Belgian couple were the latest people to be identified following the blaze that swept across the Andalusia region last week.
Thirteen people have so far died in the tragedy. Of those identified - all of whom are adults - five are from the United Kingdom, three are from Belgium, one is from France, and one is a Spanish citizen.
Officials said earlier on Monday that a 93-year-old British woman had died after being admitted to hospital on Friday with burns covering 20% of her body.
Ten people are still missing, according Spain's forensic services data unit, the CID, and some of those could be among the bodies not yet identified following the country's deadliest wildfire in more than four decades.
Investigators said DNA analysis remains the only viable identification method because of the condition of the remains.
Perimeter secured
At around midday on Sunday, the president of the regional government of Andalusia, Juanma Moreno, said that the fire - which burned more than 7,000 hectares (17,300 acres) in Los Gallardos in Almeria province when it broke out on Thursday - had been contained and its perimeter secured.
More than 1,000 residents were given the all-clear to return to their homes in the evacuated villages north of Los Gallardos, while the wildfire alert was lowered to the pre-emergency level.
However, Mr Moreno urged citizens to remain vigilant throughout the summer, noting that in Andalusia, Spain's most populous region, an average of 15 forest fires were breaking out every day, rising at times to as many as 22.
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'Sadness and desolation'
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez was due to visit the affected area on Monday.
Last week, Mr Sanchez said he felt "immense sadness and desolation in the face of the terrible consequences of the fire affecting the province of Almeria".
He added: "I want to convey my condolences to the families of those who died in the Los Gallardos forest fire.
"My wishes for a speedy recovery to the injured and my solidarity with all the affected neighbours."
Spain and much of southern Europe, including Portugal and Greece, is facing increasingly severe wildfire seasons that scientists have linked to climate change.
Experts say unusually heavy rainfall earlier this year spurred vegetation growth across parts of southern Spain, which later dried out in extreme summer heat and helped the fire spread more rapidly.
Meanwhile, in France, a wildfire of "exceptional scale" broke out in a forest near Paris, burning at least 800 hectares (1,977 acres).
It comes after several wildfires raged across the country over the weekend as temperatures soared, reaching the mid-30s in the capital.
The three people were related and found in the building in the Old Cullybackey Road area.
The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) initially said there is no ongoing risk to the public.
Later it released further information, calling on people not to speculate about what had happened.
Mid & East Antrim District Commander Superintendent William Calderwood said: "The bodies of a male and two females were discovered at a home on the Old Cullybackey Road at around 9am this morning, Monday July 13.
"The cause of death has not yet been formally established and post-mortem examinations will take place in due course.
"As such, it would be inappropriate to comment further at this time, and I would ask that the public avoid speculation."
"However, I want to reassure the public that we do not believe that there is any ongoing risk, and at this stage we are not seeking anyone else in relation to the deaths," he added.
"Our thoughts this evening are very much with the family and friends of those who have died."
Mariano Rajoy, a member of Spain's conservative Popular Party, made the comment ahead of Tuesday's World Cup semi-final between Spain and France.
"They've won every match they've played at this World Cup and are currently top of the FIFA rankings.
"They also have an exceptionally strong squad. That said, one thing they don't have is any French players," Mr Rajoy wrote in a column for Spanish outlet El Debate on 10 July.
On Monday, French foreign minister Jean-Noel Barrot told French broadcaster BFM TV that "France has no skin colour.
"Any contrary claim stems from stupidity, racism or a combination of the two."
The remarks by Mr Rajoy, who was prime minister from 2011 to 2018, were condemned by Spain's governing Socialist party.
On Sunday, Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez referenced the comments without naming his predecessor, writing on X: "There are those who still measure belonging by surname, place of birth, or skin color.
"Others measure it by our roots in a country and our will to contribute to it. Playing soccer. Caring for our elders. Or opening businesses.
"France, we'll see you in the semifinals. May the best one win and may racism lose."
Also on Sunday, French Football Federation president Philippe Diallo wrote on X that "Mariano Rajoy's remarks about the French team carry intolerable whiffs of racism," adding that "they also raise questions about the deplorable climate that gives rise to such sentiments.
"Our players do not need a certificate of nationality from a former Spanish prime minister."
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Earlier this month, French captain and star player Kylian Mbappe condemned a Paraguayan senator over remarks she made following her country's loss to France in the round of 16.
Celeste Amarilla, a senator from Paraguay's Liberal Radical Party, posted a series of comments on X mocking the French player's origins, upbringing, education and appearance after France won on 4 July with a penalty by Mbappe.
At least 156 children and teachers were killed in the incident in Minab on 28 February, the first day of the war, according to Iranian officials.
The girls' school was next to a compound used by Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps.
An initial US military investigation is understood to have found that its own Tomahawk missile was likely responsible.
According to Reuters sources, out-of-date intelligence was used by those creating "targeting packages".
More than two dozen Democratic senators have signed a letter demanding the investigation's findings are released within the next week, that Congress is briefed, and recommendations are made to stop a repetition.
"There is no justification for withholding an unclassified accounting of what happened, what went wrong, and what the Department is doing to prevent recurrence," the letter said.
They want Central Command chief Admiral Brad Cooper and defence secretary Pete Hegseth to provide an unclassified version of the findings to Congress and the public.
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"When a US strike kills civilians, the Department owes Congress, the American people, and the victims' families a clear accounting of what happened and a credible plan to prevent future failures," the letter states.
If America's military is culpable, the senators said it would be the largest loss of civilian life since more than 400 people were killed when an air raid shelter was mistakenly bombed in Iraq in 1991.
A Pentagon official said the investigation was "ongoing" and no updates were currently available.
Admiral Cooper testified in May that the investigation was "complex" as the school was on an active Iranian missile base.
Donald Trump claimed in March, without evidence, that Iran had Tomahawk missiles and has suggested it may never be clear who was responsible.
"I don't think it was us," the president said last month, adding: "Somebody said it was our missile, maybe it wasn't our missile but I have seen nothing to lead me to believe it was."
Sky News has been to Minab to look at the evidence and speak to victims. Watch our documentary at 9pm on Thursday.
The states argued cinemas and moviegoers could face higher prices if the merger goes ahead, as Paramount and Warner Bros. currently compete for the best release dates and screens at thousands of cinemas across the US.
The lawsuit represents a significant obstacle for the deal, which is seen as one of the biggest media mergers in history.
"After this merger, for every dollar generated by wide-release theatrical films and basic cable channels in this country, the combined company will pocket more than a quarter," the states said in the lawsuit.
They added: "This merger, in short, would create a media behemoth."
Paramount said the lawsuit distorts settled antitrust law and is based on a misrepresentation of competition in the entertainment industry.
The deal was cleared by US federal antitrust watchdogs last month, with critics saying Paramount's political connections helped the positive outcome.
Paramount CEO David Ellison's father, billionaire Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison, has cultivated ties with Republican President Donald Trump.
All the state attorneys general involved in Monday's lawsuit are Democrats.
The deal was cleared by the Department of Justice last month as it said it would benefit workers and consumers.
But Hollywood workers have criticised the deal, fearing it would hurt jobs, while cinema owners opposed it, worrying it would result in fewer films.
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If allowed to move forward with the deal, Paramount would control 27% of the distribution market for films that appear on screens across America, 30% of blockbuster film distribution and 27% of the market for basic cable channels, the states said.
Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon and Washington joined the lawsuit alongside California.




