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Jul 13
Fifth British national identified as victim of wildfire in Spain

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. Read more from Sky News:Ex-Spanish PM under fire for saying France has 'no French players'Dozens killed in Bangkok bar fire '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.

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Jul 13
'One of the greats': Jurassic Park star Sam Neill has died

The Northern Ireland-born New Zealand actor was best known for his leading roles in the blockbuster dinosaur franchise and The Piano, and appeared in more than 50 films over his career. The family of the screen star, who was one of New Zealand's most successful Hollywood exports, said his death had been "sudden and unexpected" in a statement on Monday. Neill was diagnosed with stage three angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma, a rare type of non-Hodgkin lymphoma, in 2022. After his cancer diagnosis, Neill said he would take a short break from acting and had announced he was cancer-free earlier this year. His family said he died on Monday in Sydney, Australia, but did not specify the cause of death. "Sam was surrounded by family and passed with the dignity that has characterised his whole life," they said. "The loss was sudden and unexpected but blessed by the fact that Sam remained cancer-free." Neill was regarded as a versatile actor, who had traversed blockbuster and arthouse films throughout his career. His range saw him dodge velociraptors in Jurassic Park, chop off actress Holly Hunter's finger in The Piano, and gouge out his eyes in the sci-fi film Event Horizon in his on-screen roles. 'One of the greats' Tributes flooded in for Neill from around the world, from Hollywood directors to prime ministers. Colin Trevorrow, who directed Neill in Jurassic World Dominion, remembered the actor as a "deeply soulful and beautiful man". "He was a friend and collaborator at a challenging time, and his strength gave us all strength," he said. He added: "It's not every lifetime you get to befriend a legend." New Zealand Prime Minister Christopher Luxon described Neill as "one of the greats". "He started out when there was barely a film industry in this country to speak of," he said. "For more than fifty years he took New Zealand stories to the world and his talents helped make our film industry into what it is today - one of our greatest cultural exports. "His work will be watched and loved long after all of us." In a post on X, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said: "Sam Neill starred in so many beloved Australian stories and he earned a special place in Australian hearts. "Wry and dry, thoughtful and laconic, Sam fought illness with the same dignity, humour and conviction that gave strength to his every performance. He will be much mourned and long remembered." Australian actor David Wenham said: "Aside from being an international all-round legend. Sam was the kindest, cheekiest, most generous and supportive friend going around." Author Kathy Lette remembered Neill as a "wonderful actor but also the most charming, kind, intelligent and deliciously self-deprecating friend". Australian comedian Magda Szubanski said: "An exceptional man - talented, kind, classy, wryly hilarious and loving. Proud cancer survivor. My heart goes out to all Sam's family and friends." From Omagh to Hollywood Neill was born Nigel John Dermot Neill in Omagh, but moved to New Zealand aged seven when his father retired from the army. At the age of 11, he changed his name to Sam. In his 2023 memoir, he said "to land in a primary school with a plum in the voice and Nigel for a name was asking for trouble". He described himself as a nerdy, unsporty and stuttering boy, but took his first steps into acting through school plays. His big break came with the low-budget 1977 New Zealand film Sleeping Dogs, which led to bigger roles in neighbouring Australia. Neill was one of a host of actors and directors who achieved international fame after an explosion of Australian films that began in the late 1970s. These included Paul Hogan, Mel Gibson, Geoffrey Rush, Russell Crowe, Jane Campion, Peter Weir and Gillian Armstrong. He first came to the attention of international audiences in Armstrong's 1979 film My Brilliant Career. Neill later appeared in the 1989 thriller Dead Calm, also starring a then-relatively unknown Nicole Kidman. He twice co-starred with Meryl Streep in Australian director Fred Schepisi films Plenty and A Cry in the Dark, based on the true story of a dingo killing a baby in the Australian Outback. He missed out on a chance at mega-stardom in the mid-1980s when he did a screen test for the role of James Bond but did not land the role. He would later achieve blockbuster fame in Steven Spielberg's 1993 hit Jurassic Park, as palaeontologist Dr Alan Grant. Younger audiences will remember Neill for his portrayal of ruthless chief inspector Chester Campbell in Peaky Blinders. Read more from Sky News:'Nothing to suggest' Ann Widdecombe murder politicalAntiques Roadshow star Theo Burrell dies aged 39 In 2022, Neill accepted ​a knighthood for outstanding contribution to film. Neill, who was married twice, divided his later years between Australia and his vineyard in New Zealand's Central Otago, which produced Pinot Noir under the label Two Paddocks. He is survived by his two sons and two daughters.

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Jul 13
What does Starmer's last week look like?

The political week starts with the shockwaves from the murder of Reform politician - Ann Widdecombe - which has put MPs' security back in the spotlight. Sam Coates and Anne McElvoy have the latest on the police investigation, Nigel Farage's response and the wider political fallout. It comes as the row over political party donations intensifies, with Reform arguing that the current safeguards aren't strong enough. Meanwhile, Sir Keir Starmer enters his final week as prime minister, while his successor Andy Burnham faces another major test in front of the Parliamentary Labour Party. Plus, will the home secretary, Shabana Mahmood, be forced to soften her immigration reforms as she attempts to change the law to deport a recently released ringleader of a Rochdale grooming gang?

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Jul 13
Youri Tielemans: Manchester United in talks to sign Aston Villa and Belgium midfielder

Sky Sports News understands the midfielder has a release clause in his contract that is being triggered by United. Discussions are advancing quickly after Belgium's exit from the World Cup. Tielemans, 29, has been at Villa since 2023, when he joined on a free transfer from Leicester, and has made 134 appearances for the club, scoring 10 times. VOTE: Is Tielemans the right option for Man Utd?Transfer Centre LIVE! | Key dates for summer window 2026Premier League ins and outs | Papers - latest headlinesDownload the Sky Sports app and follow your club During that time, Villa have twice qualified for the Champions League, reached the quarter-finals in that competition and won the Europa League last season under Unai Emery, with Tielemans opening the scoring in the final against Freiburg. Before joining Villa, Tielemans won the FA Cup and Community Shield at Leicester. United have already signed Chelsea midfielder Andrey Santos in a £50m deal, while a move for Atalanta midfielder Ederson could be revisited. United agreed a £38m deal to sign the Brazil international - who featured for his country at the World Cup - and was set to sign a four-year deal at the club with an option to extend his stay for an additional 12 months. United are not ruling out signing Ederson this summer despite a breakdown in the deal over a medical issue. United denied the deal was off to Sky Sports News last week following reports, although it will not progress on the initial price and structure. It remains possible they return for him before the window is over, depending on how the market develops. But Sky Sports News can confirm Andrey Santos has not been signed as an alternative to Ederson. 'Villa do not want to sell but they have no choice' Sky Sports News' Dharmesh Sheth: "Why would Aston Villa want to sell Tielemans? They don't want to sell. They have got no intention of selling Youri Tielemans. However, they have been hamstrung slightly because part his contract contains a release clause, which we understand to be around £36m, which Manchester United are prepared to pay. "This one is going to accelerate, and it has accelerated since Belgium were knocked out of the World Cup by Spain last week, and since that has happened, Manchester United put the wheels in motion. "And when you have a release clause and a club is prepared to meet it, this kind of deal can move very quickly. That is what looks like is happening now. "The big priority throughout this transfer window has been midfield at Old Trafford. They need to sign maybe two midfielders. We could even see Manchester United trying to sign three midfielders in this transfer window. "Even before the transfer window opened - because we knew Casemiro was going to be leaving - and now there's the added complication that Manuel Ugarte has got a serious knee injury that he suffered during the World Cup with Uruguay. "Manchester United might have been prepared to listen to offers for someone like Ugarte to free up some squad space, some wage space and some transfer fee money to come into the club to be able to to fund other midfield moves. "But it's clear Ugarte isn't going anywhere at the moment and it's clear he's not going to be playing for Manchester United, having that serious knee injury. "So United are in the market for two, maybe even three, midfielders. Youri Tielemans looks like he could be one of them." Analysis: Tielemans is ready made, reliable midfield option Sky Sports' Sam Blitz and William Bitibiri: Aston Villa have a lot of gems in their team - Emiliano Martinez, Ollie Watkins and Morgan Rogers to name a few. But ask any Villa fan who their most important player is and most will say Youri Tielemans. Many concluded that Villa's exit from the Premier League title race in February coincided with Tielemans' ankle injury. They went from a team who won 10 out of 13 league games to a side who lost four out of their next seven. So missed when absent, the Belgian is a crucial cog in the Villa midfield due to his all-round control. He's outstanding in the duels - with one of the best tackle-success rates among Premier League midfielders - but he's also pivotal on the ball. Tielemans is capable of breaking the lines and providing that killer pass. His through-ball numbers place him among the most creative players in the Premier League. Tielemans has emerged as a shock candidate to anchor Manchester United's midfield rebuild but he's one that arguably ticks more boxes than anyone else on the Old Trafford shortlist. For a club preparing for the toils of the Champions League, alongside a desire to better their current Premier League position, Tielemans represents the ready made option that proved so successful for United last season. Bryan Mbeumo and Matheus Cunha raised United's level last season and were examples of astute business from INEOS. The 29-year-old would join with a CV as impressive as his goal repertoire. He scored the winner in Leicester's FA Cup triumph in 2021, delivered again in Aston Villa's Europa League victory last season and captained Belgium at the 2026 World Cup. Tielemans brings composure in possession, leadership with or without the armband and has done it all at the highest level. INEOS are planning for the long term but that shouldn't come at the detriment to what United want to achieve immediately. Tielemans is an obvious fit and may be an early shout for signing of the summer.

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Jul 13
Police launch murder investigation after three people found dead in family home in Co Antrim

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."

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Jul 13
Ed Sheeran inspires new £12.5m music education in libraries scheme

The government's Music In Libraries initiative will be co-designed by the British singer's charity, The Ed Sheeran Foundation, with input from teachers, youth clubs and industry experts, to help young people gain free access to mentorship and education. More than 150 library authorities will be able to apply for funding to create free studio spaces with recording booths, mixing desks and other equipment, and to offer live performance opportunities, the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) said in a statement. Funding will come through the government's Dormant Assets Scheme, which allocates unclaimed money from financial products to be used for public good. The libraries programme came about following a visit by Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy and Sheeran to Brighten The Corners, a not-for-profit live music and youth arts organisation in Ipswich, in 2024, the DCMS said. It is part of a wider music plan backing grassroots projects, with the culture secretary saying that "pop is getting posher, and that must change". She continued: "Talent is everywhere, but opportunity is not. After a decade of mindless vandalism that stripped culture and creativity from too many classrooms and communities, we are putting music back at the heart of education, investing in creative careers and backing grassroots music across the country." Music "belongs to everyone, not just the privileged few", she added. Dr Renuka Fernando, chief executive of the Ed Sheeran Foundation, said the Music In Libraries programme was an "important step forward" for music education. "By expanding access to music beyond the classroom, our library network can help ensure that children and young people from communities across England have the opportunity to engage with music, regardless of where they live," she added. Read more from Sky News entertainment:Sam Fender and Olivia Dean overtake Wet Wet Wet in charts runWhat does Sky's £1.6bn deal with ITV mean for viewers? It comes after Sheeran wrote an open letter to Sir Keir Starmer in March last year, supported by stars including Harry Styles and Stormzy, calling for the action from the government to "save music education". In November, the government announced the first major change to the music curriculum in more than 10 years, to broaden the appeal of music education and boost creative subjects.

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Jul 13
Home secretary to change law to allow her to deport grooming gang leader but warns 'no guarantee'

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Jul 13
England vs India, Lord's Test player ratings: Sophie Ecclestone makes history as Tammy Beaumont and Heather Knight retire from international cricket

Maia Bouchier - 5 Batting: 23 and 2 Bouchier batted quite nicely on the first evening to safely negotiate a tricky hour through to stumps, only to then fall in the third over of the second morning to spark England's top-order collapse to 47-4 from which they failed to truly recover. She, like one or two others in this team, should be afforded a few more opportunities given a couple of notable retirements - she needs to grasp them. England annihilated by India in women's Test at Lord'sStream England cricket and more contract-free with NOWNot got Sky? Get Sky Sports or stream with NOWListen to episodes of the Sky Sports Cricket PodcastTammy Beaumont - 4 Batting: 2 and 0 A sorry way for such a wonderful servant to English cricket to bow out as she scored just two runs in her farewell Test, with her second-innings golden duck particularly cruel. Ultimately she fell foul to two cracking deliveries from Kranti Gaud that jagged back in sharply, trapping her lbw first time around and knocking back her off stump in the second instance. Her fielding, as has been the case throughout her career, was exemplary. Heather Knight - 5 Batting: 6 and 13 Knight didn't manage much more as she too closed the book on her international career, England's most-capped women's player announcing her decision midway through the Test. She was pinned in front on the second morning by Sayali Satghare, while her final Test innings was ended with a bat-pad offering to short-leg. Nat Sciver-Brunt - 6 Batting: 44 and 11 The skipper, much like the rest of her side, looked a touch jaded after only a four-day gap in between England's T20 World Cup final defeat to Australia and this historic first women's Test at Lord's. Her second-innings dismissal - bowled on the sweep to Sneh Rana the ball after having been saved by DRS - looked a particularly tired one. In the first innings, she, along with Amy Jones, tried her best to rally the team as they put on an 84-run partnership for the fifth wicket that followed the top-order collapse on the second morning - but ultimately she'd end up one of Gaud's five victims that earned the Indian seamer a place on the Lord's Honours Board. Alice Capsey - 5 Batting: 9 and 21 A fairly forgettable Test debut for Capsey, with modest contributions in both innings before being bowled. It's easy to forget that she is still only 21, having burst onto the scene a good five years ago as a 16-year-old in the inaugural season of The Hundred. With the rather sizeable holes left behind by Beaumont and Knight - across all formats - it's an important period coming up for Capsey, you feel, to now position herself as a more consistent contributor for the team. Amy Jones - 7 Batting: 52 and 54 A welcome return to form with the bat for Jones after struggling during the T20 World Cup, where she returned five single-figure scores in her six innings following a fifty in the tournament opener. She was back hitting half-centuries here, notching two of them as she provided greater resistance than her top-order team-mates - albeit her dismissals to Rana, in both innings, were ultimately pretty soft. Jones also took a couple of excellent catches, stood up to Smriti Mandhana in the first innings, and again down the legside off Mandhana in the second innings. Mady Villiers - 7 Batting: 10 and 26; Bowling: 2-79 and 0-42 An impressive return to the fold for England after having made just five appearances - three ODIs and two T20s against Ireland at the back end of the 2024 summer - in the past five years. Making her Test debut, Villiers was a standout on day one, taking 2-79 as she and Issy Wong were rewarded for probing spells after lunch that helped drag England back into proceedings after a poor morning - the off-spinner's dismissal of Harmanpreet Kaur, bowled through the gate, a particular highlight. There were glimpses too of the batting depth she can provide, particularly in the second innings, before her fun was ended by a truly sensational reflex grab by Richa Ghosh at silly mid-off. Sophie Ecclestone - 8 Bowling: 3-68 and 5-118; Batting: 11 and 50 As she is so often for England, Ecclestone was their top performer - and, arguably, not just with the ball as she notched her career-best and a maiden half-century on the final morning that hinted at untapped potential with the bat. She mopped up the Indian lower order in the first innings to become England's all-time leading wicket-taker across formats, before she claimed a fourth Test five-for second time round to earn a deserved and much-coveted spot on the Lord's Honours Board. Issy Wong - 6 Bowling: 2-41 and 0-68; Batting: 7no and 1 Wong claimed the key wicket of Mandhana for 83 in the first innings, sparking an Indian collapse from 190-3 to 285 all out after she and Villiers worked well in tandem to wrestle things back England's way. Less of a factor second time round, however, proving expensive at 4.85 an over. Consistency at this level is still the issue for the young fast bowler. Lauren Bell - 5 Bowling: 1-50 and 2-27; Batting: 3 and 0 Not her best outing, with England struggling to get any sort of grip on the Test match following a poor first hour or so in which India brought up their 100 in little more than 18 overs. She bowled Yastika Bhatia with a beauty during that period, but bowled just the nine overs at the cost of 50 runs in that first innings, before putting in an improved showing in the second innings, by which time it was a little too late in the context of the match. Lauren Filer - 4 Bowling: 2-40 and 0-61; Batting: 0 and 4no Filer fell foul of being a bit undercooked for this match, having played no cricket over the last month while warming the bench during the T20 World Cup. Her second ball of the entire Test - a snorter to find Shafali Verma's edge through to Jones - would be as good as it would get for the fast bowler who faded thereafter without the miles in her legs. Watch cricket and more top sport live on Sky Sports contract-free with NOW. England men begin a three-match one-day international series at home to India on Tuesday, at Edgbaston, with coverage on Sky Sports Cricket from 10am (11am first ball).

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