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Ex-Indian minister shot dead

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Gunmen kill PDP candidate, Brother
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A senior politician in India’s financial capital Mumbai was shot dead on Saturday, weeks ahead of key state elections, with police probing the role of a notorious crime gang.

Baba Siddique, 66, a local lawmaker and former minister in Maharashtra state, was shot multiple times in the chest outside his son’s office in Mumbai, Indian media reported.

Maharashtra’s deputy chief minister Ajit Pawar, from the same party as Siddique, said he was “shocked” by the “cowardly attack”.

The Hindustan Times newspaper reported that two suspected attackers had been arrested, and police were searching for another.

Broadcaster NDTV said the two suspects claimed they were part of a gang run by Lawrence Bishnoi, who is in jail accused of running a crime gang that has carried out multiple killings.

The shooting comes just weeks after Siddique’s security detail was upgraded after he received death threats, and ahead of elections slated for later this year.

“The incident will be thoroughly investigated and strict action will be taken against the attackers,” Pawar said in a statement. “The mastermind behind the attack will also be traced.”

Siddique was close to several Bollywood stars and was known for throwing grand parties.

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Meanwhile, in 2023, in Uttar Pradesh, India, Atiq Ahmad, a politician with over 100 criminal cases, was shot dead on live TV while being escorted by police for a medical checkup.

As he spoke to journalists, a gunman approached and shot him in the head, followed by multiple rounds. His brother, Ashraf, was also killed in the attack.

This occurred just two days after Ahmad’s son, Asad, was killed by police in what many perceived as an extra-judicial act.

AFP

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Court jails judge for keeping housekeeper as ‘slave’

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A United Nations judge has been sentenced to six years and four months in prison for enslaving a young Ugandan woman in the United Kingdom.

Lydia Mugambe, 50, was convicted at Oxford Crown Court of multiple offences, including conspiring to facilitate a breach of UK immigration law, facilitating travel with a view to exploitation, forcing someone to work, and conspiracy to intimidate a witness.

During the trial, the court heard that Mugambe exploited her victim, who cannot be named for legal reasons, by forcing her to work as a maid and provide unpaid childcare while preventing her from securing paid employment.

The prosecution said Mugambe tricked the woman into coming to the UK under false pretenses, taking “advantage of her status” in what was described as the “most egregious way”.

Mugambe, a High Court judge in Uganda and a recent addition to the UN’s judicial roster as of May 2023, was pursuing a PhD in law at the University of Oxford at the time of the offences.

Her arrest by Thames Valley Police occurred three months prior to her UN appointment. When confronted by officers, Mugambe claimed diplomatic immunity and insisted she was not a criminal, stating the victim had volunteered to come with her.

Sentencing her on Friday, May 2, Judge David Foxton described the case as “very sad” and noted her extensive background in human rights law. However, he emphasized that Mugambe showed no remorse and instead sought to shift blame onto the victim.

In a statement read in court, the victim spoke of living in “almost constant fear” due to Mugambe’s influence in Uganda. She expressed fears for her safety if she were to return home and said she may never see her mother again.

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Prosecutor Caroline Haughey KC told the court that Mugambe deliberately deceived the woman to serve her own interests.

“She exploited and abused [the woman], taking advantage of her lack of understanding of her rights to properly paid employment,” Haughey said.

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Car bomb kills senior Russian military officer

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Law enforcement officers work at the site of a car bomb, which killed senior Russian military officer, in Balashikha, outside Moscow, Russia April 25, 2025. REUTERS
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A senior Russian military officer, Major General Yaroslav Moskalik, was killed on Friday in a car bomb explosion in the town of Balashikha, just east of Moscow, Russia’s Investigative Committee has confirmed. The powerful blast, which also claimed the life of a second unidentified individual, is being treated as a criminal case.

Moskalik was the deputy head of the Main Operations Directorate of the General Staff of the Russian Armed Forces—a key position in Russia’s military leadership. The Investigative Committee revealed that the explosion resulted from a homemade explosive device filled with destructive elements. While the perpetrators remain unknown, authorities are yet to name suspects in the attack.

The blast, reportedly detonated remotely, occurred as Moskalik walked past a parked car near his residence. Russian news outlet Baza, citing law enforcement sources, said the device had been planted in the vehicle and triggered as Moskalik approached. Video footage published by Izvestia showed the explosion hurling car parts metres into the air, underscoring the severity of the blast.

Moskalik had participated in several major diplomatic and military negotiations, including the 2015 Normandy Format talks, where representatives from Germany, France, Russia, and Ukraine convened in a bid to resolve the ongoing conflict in Eastern Ukraine. He was part of the security subgroup in the Minsk peace talks, working alongside Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and top Kremlin advisers.

The targeted killing of high-ranking military figures has become increasingly common since the outbreak of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. Moscow has blamed several of these incidents on Ukrainian intelligence operations. In a notable parallel, Ukrainian authorities were accused of orchestrating the December assassination of Lieutenant General Igor Kirillov using a bomb concealed in an electric scooter.

As of Friday evening, Ukraine’s Security Service (SBU) has not commented on Moskalik’s death. The Kremlin, too, has remained silent, though analysts expect the incident to heighten security measures and intensify Russia’s internal investigations amid growing fears of infiltration and targeted attacks within its borders.

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Cardinal sacked by Pope Francis over financial scandal demands to be part of conclave to choose new pope

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Cardinal Giovanni Angelo Becciu, sacked by Pope Francis, yet demanding to vote in the Conclave
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A cardinal convicted of financial crimes by the Vatican is claiming he can take part in the forthcoming conclave despite being listed as a “non-elector.”

Cardinal Giovanni Angelo Becciu, once one of the most powerful figures in the Vatican, was ordered by Pope Francis in 2020 to resign the “rights and privileges” of a cardinal after he became embroiled in a Vatican financial scandal.

The Sardinian cardinal previously held the position of “sostituto” (“substitute”) in the Holy See’s Secretariat of State – a papal chief of staff equivalent.

The role offered Becciu walk-in privileges to see the pope and he commanded huge authority across the church’s central government. He was later moved to a position running the Vatican’s saint-making department.

Becciu was convicted of embezzlement and fraud in 2023 and handed a five-and-a-half-year jail sentence. He is the first cardinal to be convicted by the Vatican’s criminal court.

But the cardinal, who has always maintained his innocence, launched an appeal that’s currently still under consideration. He’s allowed to continue to live in a Vatican apartment while this process is underway.

While the Holy See press office has listed him as a “non-elector,” Becciu told a Sardinian newspaper on Tuesday that “there was no explicit will to exclude me from the conclave nor a request for my explicit renunciation in writing.”

The decision of his participation will likely be decided by the dean of the College of Cardinals, Giovanni Battista Re, and Cardinal Pietro Parolin, who will oversee the conclave proceedings inside the Sistine Chapel.

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The investigation into Becciu centered on the Holy See’s disastrous investment in a London property that saw the church lose tens of millions of dollars.

During his papacy, Francis sought to clean up Vatican finances and changed the law to ensure that Becciu, as a cardinal, could be judged by a Vatican tribunal of judges.

Although Becciu lost his rights and privileges as a cardinal, he was never technically removed from the College of Cardinals. He is allowed to take part in the pre-conclave discussions.

Only cardinals under the age of 80 are allowed to vote in a papal election. As it currently stands, there are 135 eligible cardinals who will participate in conclave. Becciu is 76 and still eligible when it comes to his age. (CNN)

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