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Local media said Orla Wates was involved in an accident on the Ha Giang Loop, a popular route in northern Vietnam that winds through mountains near the border with China.
Viet Nam News reported she died at the Viet Duc Friendship Hospital in the capital, Hanoi, on 2 April.
Her parents, Andrew and Henrietta Wates, told the outlet she "lived life to the full".
"Orla was beautiful, independent and very funny, with a sharp wit," they said.
Her mother thanked the hospital's Dr Trịnh Van Dong and its emergency team for caring for Ms Wates – and said her organs had been donated to save others.
The family met doctors at a "gratitude ceremony" on Wednesday morning, according to the hospital's Facebook page.
Ms Wates' mother told Viet Nam News that donating her organs is "what Orla would have wanted".
"Knowing that she is living on through them brings us great comfort," she said.
In an interview on the hospital's social media, she added: "It is our way of thanking you."
Ms Wates' organs saved three Vietnamese patients in end-stage organ failure, said Vietnam's health minister.
In a letter to the family, Dao Hong Lan wrote: "Your daughter's legacy will continue to live through those who received her organs and in the hearts of the Vietnamese people."
The minister said it was one of the country's first cases of multi-organ donation from a foreigner.
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The UK Foreign Office confirmed its consular staff are supporting the family.
"Our thoughts are with the family and friends of Orla Wates, following her tragic death in Vietnam," said a statement.
"We are in touch with the local authorities, and our consular staff are doing all they can to support Orla's family at this hugely difficult time."
Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis confirmed the ban on Wednesday morning, announcing it would begin on 1 January 2027.
He said rising anxiety, sleep problems and addictive platforms were to blame for the ban.
In a video message to Greek children, the PM said spending long hours in front of screens does not allow their minds to rest, and they faced growing pressure from constant comparison on social media and online comments.
"Greece will be among the first countries to take such an initiative," Mr Mitsotakis said.
"I am certain, however, that it will not be the last. Our goal is to push the European Union in this direction as well."
According to local media reports, Greece's ban is likely to be enforced through a state-mandated app that is installed on all devices.
The app can block access to social media sites like TikTok, Instagram and Facebook and is already used to stop underage teenagers in the country from buying cigarettes and alcohol.
There is widespread support for a social media ban among adults in Greece, with 80% supporting the restrictions, according to polling firm ALCO.
According to the Greek Safer Internet Centre in Athens, 75% of children using social media in Greece are of primary‑school age.
"Ban them, shut them down. We've reached our limits... We parents need help," one mother told the Reuters news agency before the ban was announced.
Georgia Efstathiou, 43, said she had tried everything to stop her 14-year-old son from spending so much time on social media - and called on the government to intervene.
Another parent, Dimitris Daniil, 44, said he thought a ban should only be in place as a last resort.
"I'd prefer a different approach, limiting mobile phone use within the family," he said.
"But where that's not possible, perhaps a ban would work as the extreme remedy."
His 14-year-old daughter Katerina said most teenagers her age have never known a world without social media.
"It is the way we learned since we were born," she said.
"I can control it - but then again I usually get carried away."
Phones are already banned in Greek schools, unlike the UK, and the government has set up parental control platforms to limit teenagers' screen time.
As well as announcing the ban, Mr Mitsotakis wrote to European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen to call for coordinated EU action.
He argued national measures would not be enough to protect young people and proposed establishing an EU-wide "digital age of majority" of 15.
He asked for a coordinated framework to be put in place across the bloc by the end of 2026.
In December, Australia banned under-16s from the technology, becoming the first country to do so.
Since then, there have been growing calls around the world for governments to tackle online harms faced by young people.
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A number of countries are exploring social media bans, including Slovenia, Spain and Austria, with the UK government consulting the public on social media restrictions.
As well as an all-out ban for under-16s, the consultation also explores restrictions like digital curfews and screen time limits. The results of that consultation are expected in the summer.
The Greek scheme could be the first such ban in Europe when it is introduced next year, although legislators in France may implement a ban sooner if they can get political approval.
The French Senate voted in favour of a ban last month. However, a disagreement persists between the government, which advocates a broad ban, and the Senate, which wants to make it conditional on the publication of a list of platforms deemed dangerous for children. If there is agreement in the coming months, a ban would come into force in September.
At the same time, a series of landmark legal trials is under way in the US, with the first two major trials recently finding social media companies liable for harming users through addictive features and design.
Debbie Perry, the Friends actor's stepmother, made the request in a victim impact statement filed to the court ahead of the sentencing of Jasveen Sangha, known as the "Ketamine Queen", later today.
Five people, including doctors and Perry's personal assistant, have pleaded guilty to various charges connected with Perry's death. Sangha is the latest to be sentenced and prosecutors are calling for her to be jailed for at least 15 years.
In her statement to the US district court for central California, Debbie Perry said the pain caused by Perry's death "to hundreds maybe thousands" was "irreversible".
She said there is "no escape" from the thought that they will never see Perry again, and added: "You caused this."
Making a request to the court, she said: "Please give this heartless woman the maximum prison sentence so she won't be able to hurt other families like ours. Thank you."
Perry was found in his hot tub by his assistant Kenneth Iwamasa, who is due to be sentenced later this year, in October 2023. A medical examiner later ruled that ketamine and other factors had caused him to lose consciousness and drown.
Prosecutors say in court documents that Sangha "repeatedly sold dangerous drugs in high volume", that she "ran a stash house and directed others to help sell her drugs", and "obstructed justice to conceal her actions".
Perry bought large amounts of ketamine from her, including 25 vials for $6,000 (£4,464) in cash four days before his death, prosecutors previously said.
In her guilty plea last year, Sangha admitted one count of maintaining a drug-involved premises, three counts of distribution of ketamine, and one count of distribution of ketamine resulting in death or serious bodily injury.
Lawyers defending her say she has accepted responsibility for her crimes and are calling for her sentence to be no more than time already served.
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In December last year, Salvador Plasencia, a doctor, was jailed for two-and-a-half years for illegally supplying ketamine to Perry in the weeks before his death.
Another doctor, Mark Chavez, was sentenced to eight months home confinement over the fatal overdose, later in December. Erik Fleming, an associate of the actor, is due to be sentenced later this year.
Perry had struggled with addiction for years, dating back to his time on Friends, when he became one of the biggest stars of his generation playing Chandler Bing alongside Jennifer Aniston, Courteney Cox, Lisa Kudrow, Matt LeBlanc and David Schwimmer.
The show ran for 10 seasons, from 1994 to 2004, and Perry and his castmates also appeared in the reunion show in 2021.
Forecasters said southeast and central England can expect the top temperatures, but also warned people to be aware of high UV and pollen levels.
It comes after the Met Office said northwest Wales enjoyed Tuesday's highest temperature in the UK with 24.8 (76.64F), making it the hottest day of the year so far and the "warmest 7 April on record".
The warm temperatures are "well above" the early April average of 12C to 15C (53.6F-59F), the agency said.
The UK is expected to be hotter than many popular European destinations on Wednesday, including Rome, Corfu and Barcelona.
Forecasters said the warmth is due to southerly winds, but it will turn much cooler on Thursday as a more westerly wind develops behind a cold front.
Find out the forecast for your area
Sky News weather producer Jo Robinson said: "This is likely to be the warmest early April spell since 2020.
"UV levels will be moderate - which may catch people out after the long winter, while the pollen count will be very high for most.
"On Thursday, temperatures will be much lower just about everywhere, but southeast England will hold onto the warmth with temperatures into the low twenties."
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The Met Office said daytime temperatures could fall by around 10C between Wednesday and Thursday ahead of "more unsettled" conditions later in the week.
Despite the warm sunshine across many parts of England, there will be cooler conditions in Northern Ireland and northwest Scotland.
The Met Office said there could also be outbreaks of rain.




