A fourth person has died as two major forest fires continue to rage in the border area between France and northern Catalonia in Spain.
The government of Catalonia and the fire service said all four victims were French.
The fourth person to die was a 64-year-old man who died of burn injuries.
A father and his 15-year-old daughter died yesterday after trying to escape the flames down a cliffside in Portbou, a coastal town where one of the fires broke out.
A man died of a heart attack further inland near La Junquera, a border town at the centre of the biggest fire.
The area includes the Costa Brava, one of the most popular beach destinations in Spain, and major motorways for holidaymakers driving to and from southern France.
The Catalan government said at least 23 people had been injured.
The fire now affects an area of 13,000 hectares inland and has burned through about 200 hectares near Portbou.
Around 150,000 residents in the inland area have been told to stay at home and ashes from the blaze have begun to reach the Barcelona area.
The fires are the area's most devastating for over 20 years, the local government said.
Environment Ministry data show that 2012 is already the worst year for forest fires in Spain for over a decade.