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From brutal occupation to brazen recruitment: Russia turns Bucha residents against their own

On a recent evening in March, Bohdan Tymchenko, a quiet and unassuming man from Bucha, logged on to his computer to play the popular video game World of Tanks. Less than two weeks later, he planted two bombs outside his flat. What unfolded in the intervening days offers a stark glimpse into a growing pattern: Ukrainians drawn in online by Russian intelligence services, promised money or coerced into carrying out sabotage attacks against their own country. That the bombing occurred in Bucha – a leafy town on the outskirts of Kyiv that has become synonymous with the brutality of Russia’s invasion – has only deepened the shock. Ukrainian investigators believe Tymchenko, 21, who lived with his grandmother in a five-storey apartment block, was first approached by a Russian handler in the video game’s online chat. The suspected agent then guided him on the messaging app Telegram, step by step, instructing him how to source materials, assemble the devices in his flat and carry out the attack. Tymchenko was promised $1,200 (£900) in return. The explosions, in the early hours of the morning, had the hallmarks of a double-tap attack. An initial blast outside the building at about 5.30am was followed by a second device detonating nearly two hours later, injuring two officers after police had arrived. “It’s a stab in the back. It doesn’t really get worse than one of your own citizens doing this,” said Dmytro Prokudin, the head of the Kyiv regional prosecutor’s office. “And we are seeing this more and more.” Ukraine’s security service, the SBU, has identified more than 800 Ukrainians, including at least 240 minors, recruited by Russia over the past two years with targets ranging from critical infrastructure to draft offices. The goal, officials say, is to spread uncertainty, fear and distrust. For residents of the apartment block in Bucha, the idea that the threat could come from within has been deeply unsettling. “I simply don’t understand how this could happen here, done by someone you see every day,” said Inna, a pensioner who lives next door to Tymchenko. Inna survived the town’s brief Russian occupation in the spring of 2022 but lost friends. More than 400 bodies were discovered after the town’s liberation, including civilians with their hands bound. “Russia wants to make us feel unsafe and create chaos, after everything we have already been through,” Inna said. Like others, she initially assumed the first explosion was the result of a Russian drone or missile strike, only to be left confused when there had been no air raid alert. Another resident said she had noticed two large black rubbish bags near the entrance while walking her dog late that night, hours before the blasts, but thought nothing of it. “How could I imagine they were bombs? It didn’t even cross my mind,” she said, stroking her chihuahua. Some in Bucha believed they had seen the suspect lurking behind trees during the blasts, detonating the devices from up close. Investigators are looking into the reports. There had been no obvious warning signs about Tymchenko, people in Bucha said. He was described as shy, largely keeping to himself and spending much of his time at home, unemployed. What makes the case even more puzzling for prosecutors is that Tymchenko came from a military family. His brother was killed fighting for Ukraine and posthumously awarded a medal for bravery, while his mother continues to serve as a medic in the armed forces. “We are still trying to establish his motive and whether he was specifically targeted because of his background or simply approached at random,” said Prokudin. In most cases, Ukrainian officials believe, Russian handlers cast a wide net online, probing potential recruits in casual conversations before escalating contact. “The recruiter logs in, starts chatting and, after a few questions, quickly understands whether a person is willing to cooperate. That’s the playbook,” said Prokudin, adding that money was usually the main motivator. At other times, Ukrainian relatives living in Russian-occupied territories are used to exert pressure on recruits. The convoluted nature of the recruitment scheme, involving multiple intermediaries and Telegram handlers, makes it difficult to trace and identify. “There are clearly large numbers of Russians working on sabotage operations inside our country, identifying and exploiting weak links,” Prokudin said. Appearing in court last month, Tymchenko said he had been blackmailed, claiming his handler told him they knew his mother’s whereabouts and could “see her from a drone”. Investigators believe his original plan may have been disrupted. On the evening before the explosion, a woman called police to report a domestic incident at the flat. Officers grew suspicious after tracing the call to a distant region. Fake calls have been used across the country to lure first responders into traps, creating a climate of distrust. “The initial idea appears to have been to lure police to the scene and detonate the first device before setting off a second one when back up would arrive,” the prosecutor said. Prokudin described how police were recently called after a woman reported that her husband had killed their daughter and taken his own life. Officers hesitated to enter, even though the report was real. “We are being called to inspect what sounds like a domestic tragedy, but we cannot be sure whether it is real or a setup. This is exactly Russia’s goal,” he said. Russia’s use of proxies in Ukraine, western officials say, should be seen as part of a broader pattern. Across Europe, intelligence agencies have been grappling with a wave of Russian sabotage, arson and disinformation, often carried out by individuals recruited online. “Moscow’s sabotage activities in Ukraine mirror what we are seeing elsewhere in Europe,” said a senior European intelligence officer, speaking on condition of anonymity. “They use the same tactics, the same methods, the same platforms. Ukraine is often the testing ground.”

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Middle East crisis live: US and Iran fail to reach a deal after marathon peace talks in Pakistan

Over in the UK, the health secretary, Wes Streeting, has said the failure to reach a deal in the US-Iran peace talks in Pakistan was “disappointing”. He told Sky News this morning: It’s obviously disappointing that we haven’t yet seen a breakthrough in negotiations and an end to this war in Iran that is a sustainable one. But as ever in diplomacy, you’re failing until you succeed. So while these talks may not have ended in success, that doesn’t mean there isn’t merit in continuing to try. Clearly when you look at the impact of the war in Iran on this country, on other countries around the world who have no part in this war, it is in all of our interests for there to be a breakthrough and an end to this war. The UK, which has been hit hard by rising bills resulting from the economic impact of the war, has been working on a “practical plan” to try to reopen the strait of Hormuz (to all vessels).

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Peruvians to go to polls hoping to break cycle of instability

Peruvians go to the polls on Sunday hoping to break a cycle of instability that has produced nine presidents in a decade as well as surging violent crime, corruption scandals and overwhelming distrust in institutions and politicians. About 27 million people who are eligible to vote must choose between a record 35 presidential candidates as well as contenders for the bicameral congress – all from a ballot sheet measuring nearly half a metre, the longest in the country’s history. The fight against crime tops voter concerns amid record homicide and extortion rates but political corruption comes a close second. Four former presidents are in jail, most of them linked to bribery cases involving the Brazilian construction company Odebrecht. Keiko Fujimori, a three-time presidential candidate and the daughter of the late president Alberto Fujimori, holds a narrow lead in opinion polls. She is closely followed by the comedian Carlos Álvarez and two former mayors of Lima, the ultra-conservative Rafael López Aliaga and the media mogul Ricardo Belmont. None of the candidates is polling above 15%, making a runoff on 7 June almost certain, according to Urpi Torrado, of the polling company Datum Internacional. “This is one of the most unpredictable elections on record,” said Torrado. “There could be surprises this Sunday because we don’t know who will make it through to the second round.” Fujimori, 50, is making her fourth bid for the presidency, having reached the runoff in the last three elections (2021, 2016 and 2011) and losing by extremely narrow margins each time. The rightwinger served as first lady in the autocratic 1990s government of her late father, who was convicted over corruption and human rights abuses and spent 16 years in prison. Ricardo Belmont, who was Lima’s mayor from 1990 to 1995, has risen in most opinion polls, winning the younger vote with his upbeat messaging and the slogan “hugs not bullets”, borrowed from the former Mexican leader Andrés Manuel López Obrador. Gonzalo Banda, a Peruvian political analyst and doctoral researcher at University College of London’s Institute of the Americas, called Belmont an “anti-establishment candidate catching votes from the right, the left and the centre”. The 80-year-old is also known for making xenophobic and sexist remarks. López Aliaga, who was Lima’s mayor until a few months ago, has run a hard-right campaign littered with disinformation, hate speech and threats against journalists and opponents. But the 65-year-old rail magnate, who has opposed same-sex marriage and pledged to refuse abortion to underage rape victims, has slipped in the polls. The surprise entry is Álvarez, one of Peru’s best-known comedians, who has been imitating presidents for the last three decades. However, his proposals are far from lighthearted. He describes himself as an admirer of Donald Trump and El Salvador’s leader, Nayib Bukele, and his tough-on-crime campaign has focused on megaprisons and the death penalty. “It is ironically poetic that due to this cycle of [political] decay in Peru, we could end up with a comedy performer who imitates politicians as president,” said Banda. Other candidates include Roberto Sánchez, who has been endorsed by the ousted former populist leader Pedro Castillo and wears the same style of wide-brimmed sombrero. Centrist candidates include a former defence minister, Jorge Nieto, and a former university rector, Alfonso López Chau. Torrado said: “No political leader has emerged who can generate a sense of hope, a feeling that this person could change the country’s political course or solve its problems. Peruvians feel that in recent years, politicians have turned their backs on the people.”

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Benin holds presidential election four months after failed coup

This Sunday, just four months after a failed coup, Benin heads to the polls for a presidential election that feels more like a coronation than a contest. Patrice Talon, the businessman turned politician who has been president since 2016, is ineligible to run again after serving two five-year terms. The winner of Sunday’s election will have the chance to run for two seven-year terms instead, after a controversial constitutional amendment elongated presidential tenures. Romuald Wadagni, the country’s finance minister who emerged as the ruling coalition’s candidate without any primaries, is overwhelmingly the favourite to win this weekend. According to the investigative newsletter Africa Confidential, the path to a Wadagni win was cleared with ruthless efficiency as other possible contenders were sidelined, placated or removed. Wadagni, who speaks English fluently after years as a technocrat in the US, is seen as the architect of Benin’s recent fiscal stability in the Talon era. He has vowed to implement free schooling and more jobs, appealing promises in a country where young people account for more than half of the population. If the 49-year-old emerges as the winner, he will be one of the youngest leaders on a continent where the average presidential age is 65. West and central Africa is home to two of the world’s longest-serving leaders in Cameroon’s 93-year-old Paul Biya and Equatorial Guinea’s Teodoro Obiang Nguema, 83. A peaceful democratic transition after the failed coup also presents Benin an opportunity to buck another regional trend: at least three of its neighbours are ruled by juntas. But Talon’s critics say he is also a strongman in a similar mould and have accused him of crushing dissent despite noticeable development in the country. Discontent trickled down to some troops and coalesced into December’s attempted military takeover. But many believe the soldiers also acted because of a rise in jihadist attacks at its borders with Burkina Faso, Niger and Nigeria. Several newspapers have been closed indefinitely by authorities after publishing information critical of the government. Hugues Sossoukpè, a journalist who had been in exile in Togo since 2021, was arrested on Ivorian soil by Beninese agents last July. He remains in Ouidah prison, tagged as a “dangerous cyberactivist who advocates terrorism”. “Civic space continues to shrink in Benin with a wave of attacks on independent media outlets and people still being arbitrarily arrested and detained for dissent,” said Dieudonné Dagbéto, the head of Amnesty International Benin. “Despite progress, women and marginalised groups face discrimination, while forced evictions jeopardise the human rights of thousands of people.” There are also concerns about Benin increasingly becoming a one-party state. In 2024, parliament raised the thresholds for candidacy, now requiring parties to get at least 10% of the vote to secure seats and for an aspiring president to be sponsored by at least 15% of the country’s mayors and lawmakers. That helped the ruling coalition win all 109 seats in January’s legislative elections as opposition parties found it extremely difficult to make the cut. Only 36% of the approximately 7.8 million people registered to vote showed up for the January poll. Ahead of this weekend, there are concerns about a similar outcome. The main opposition to Wadagni is the former culture minister Paul Hounkpè of Cowry Forces for an Emerging Benin (FCBE), a fringe opposition party. He is seen as a token candidate after cutting a deal with the ruling coalition to meet the required threshold. Unable to meet the requirements, the lead opposition party, the Democrats, are not presenting any candidates. While they have not called for a boycott, they have refused to back anyone in this weekend’s election. In fact, the party suspended almost two dozen members for anti-party activities after reportedly endorsing the ruling coalition candidate. “The disqualification of our duo [candidate and running mate] is a programmed exclusion,” it said in a statement after the constitutional court affirmed the exclusion last October. “It proves that the 2026 election is being organised to exclude any serious challenger to the ruling power.”

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JD Vance and US delegation leave Pakistan after failing to reach deal with Iran

The US vice-president, JD Vance, left Islamabad on Sunday after failing to reach a deal with Iran in a marathon 21 hours of negotiations. Vance cited shortcomings in the talks, saying that Iran had chosen not to accept American terms, including to not build nuclear weapons. “The bad news is that we have not reached an agreement, and I think that’s bad news for Iran much more than it’s bad news for the United States of America,” Vance said. “So we go back to the United States having not come to an agreement. We’ve made very clear what our red lines are.” Vance said he spoke with the US president, Donald Trump, at least half a dozen times during the talks, and one of the most significant points of difference between the two sides was around Iran’s nuclear program. “We need to see an affirmative commitment that [Iran] will not seek a nuclear weapon, and they will not seek the tools that would enable them to quickly achieve a nuclear weapon,” he said, “That is the core goal of the president of the United States, and that’s what we’ve tried to achieve through these negotiations.” Iran’s foreign ministry downplayed the apparent breakdown, saying that no one had held any expectation that talks with the US could have reached an agreement within one session. “Naturally, from the beginning we should not have expected to reach an agreement in a single session. No one had such an expectation,” ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baqaei said, according to state broadcaster IRIB. He said Tehran was “confident that contacts between us and Pakistan, as well as our other friends in the region, will continue”. Iran’s semi-official Tasnim news agency meanwhile noted that “excessive” US demands had hindered reaching an agreement. Neither Washington nor Tehran has indicated what will happen after the 14-day ceasefire initially agreed to by the US, Iran and Israel, but Pakistani mediators called on the US and Iran to maintain the ceasefire. “It is imperative that the parties continue to uphold their commitment to ceasefire,” Pakistan’s foreign minister, Ishaq Dar, said, adding that his country would try to facilitate a new dialogue between Iran and the US in the coming days. The talks in Islamabad were the first direct US-Iranian meeting in more than a decade and the highest-level discussions since the 1979 Islamic Revolution. The final outcome could determine the fate of the fragile two-week ceasefire and the reopening of the strait of Hormuz, a choke point for about 20% of global energy supplies that Iran has blocked since the war began. The conflict has sent global oil prices soaring and killed thousands of people. Vance, the special envoy Steve Witkoff and Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner met the Iranian parliamentary speaker, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, and the foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, for two hours before a rest, according to a source from the mediator Pakistan. The Iranian delegation arrived on Friday dressed in black in mourning for late supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and others killed in the war. They carried shoes and bags of some students killed during the US bombing of a school next to a military compound, the Iranian government said. The Pentagon has said the strike is under investigation but Reuters has reported that military investigators believe the US was likely responsible for it. “There were mood swings from the two sides and the temperature went up and down during the meeting,” another Pakistani source said in reference to the first round of talks. For the US-Iran talks, Islamabad, a city of more than 2 million people, was locked down with thousands of paramilitary personnel and army troops on the streets. Pakistan’s mediating role is a remarkable transformation for a nation that was a diplomatic outcast a year ago. As the talks started, the US military said it was “setting the conditions” to start clearing the strait of Hormuz. The strategic waterway is central to the ceasefire talks. The US military said two of its warships had passed through the strait and conditions were being set to clear mines, while Iran’s state media denied any US ships had transited through it. Before the talks began, a senior Iranian source told Reuters the US had agreed to release frozen assets in Qatar and other foreign banks. A US official denied agreeing to release the money. As well as the release of assets abroad, Tehran is demanding control of the strait of Hormuz, payment of war reparations and a ceasefire across the region including in Lebanon, according to Iranian state TV and officials. Tehran also wants to collect transit fees in the strait of Hormuz. Trump’s stated goals have shifted, but as a minimum he wants free passage for global shipping through the strait and the crippling of Iran’s nuclear enrichment programme to ensure it cannot produce an atomic bomb.

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Hungarians vote in hard-fought election that could oust Viktor Orbán after 16 years

Hungarians are heading to the ballot boxes to vote in a hard-fought parliamentary election that could oust Viktor Orbán after 16 years in power and potentially reshape the central European country’s relations with the EU, Moscow and Washington. In the campaign, Orbán – the EU’s longest-serving leader – has trailed in the polls as he faces an unprecedented challenge from Péter Magyar, a former elite member of Orbán’s Fidesz party. The challenge to Orbán’s power has sent rightwing leaders from across the globe scrambling to rally behind him. This week, JD Vance turned up in Budapest for a two-day visit, the US vice-president telling reporters that his aim was to “help” Orbán win. The US president, Donald Trump, has also repeatedly endorsed Orbán, most recently on Friday, when he vowed on social media that he would bring US “economic might” to the country if Orbán is re-elected. Months earlier, leaders including Italy’s Giorgia Meloni and Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu also made it clear that they were backing Orbán. The result is an election that has played out on both the global and domestic stage, as Orbán argued that the country’s biggest threat is the war in Ukraine and he alone is capable of keeping the peace, while Magyar focused on domestic issues, with pledges to crack down on corruption, repair the strained relationship with the EU and funnel funds to the country’s crumbling public services. After Magyar and his centre-right Tisza party crisscrossed the country, holding as many as six rallies a day, most polls have put his party in the lead. Analysts have expressed caution, however, as undecided voters and Hungarians abroad could still sway the result, as could alleged vote-buying. For many in Hungary, Sunday’s vote will also be a test of how deeply Orbán’s political system is embedded, after the rightwing populist leader spent more than a decade working to transform Hungary into a “petri dish for illiberalism”: rewriting election laws to his party’s benefit, manoeuvring to put loyalists in control of an estimated 80% of the country’s media and clamping down on dissenting voices. The result will be closely watched by the Maga movement and the global far right, many of whom have long cited Orbán as an inspiration and sought to follow his playbook. Questions have also swirled over Orbán’s government and its relationship to Moscow amid allegations of Russian interference in the ballot, as well as audio that appeared to suggest a minister had shared confidential EU information with the Russian government. Orbán’s government has cited the leaks – including a transcript in which Orbán reportedly told the Russian pesident, Vladimir Putin, “I am at your service” – as evidence of foreign interference. At a Friday night rally for Orbán in Székesfehérvár, a city of about 100,000 people in central Hungary, hundreds of people turned up, eagerly waving flags and cheering as cameras panned over the city where the first kings of Hungary were crowned and buried. “I’m so happy to be here,” gushed Cecília, 78. “He’s the best leader in the world.” Sunday was set to be the fifth time since 2010 that she had voted for Orbán “Viktor Orbán will win, of course, with a supermajority,” she said. Others were more circumspect. “When it comes to polls, it depends on who does them, but the situation does seem tense. I’m worried for him,” said Sándor, 69. “He seems tired.” Scattered among the crowd were also a handful of Magyar supporters. “I was curious to hear the prime minister speak,” said Richárd, 27. What he had heard, he said, hinted at a fundamental difference between the two leading parties. “For 16 years, Fidesz has been campaigning on hatred and fear,” he said. “While Tisza has been trying to express hope at all of their events.”

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‘Another institutional abuse’: UK survivor of Irish mother and baby home can’t afford to accept compensation

A twin sister and brother were separated from their parents in Ireland’s mother and baby home scandal – but only one of them can be compensated without being penalised. Rosemary Adaser, 70, of Ealing, west London, was among tens of thousands of children placed in abusive institutions for being born out of marriage in Ireland. But if Adaser accepts compensation under the Irish mother and baby institutions payment scheme, which opened in 2024, she faces losing at least £1,000 a month in housing benefit. A legal loophole means because the compensation she is due is from a foreign government, normal “capital disregard” provisions do not apply, and any payments can be treated as cash savings for means-testing benefits and social care. Rosemary’s brother, Anthony Adaser, still lives in Ireland, so has been compensated without facing penalties. He says the unfairness of the disparity is “galling”, robbing his sister of the “peace of mind” his settlement has given him in retirement. On 13 March, the prime minister, Keir Starmer, said the Westminster government would introduce “Philomena’s law”, which would protect survivors from penalties. However, with no legislative timetable and no interim protections in place, about 13,000 survivors still risk losing benefits, and campaigners say elderly people are fighting individual battles with the authorities. Adaser said: “This is just another institutional abuse. I raised my family without any recourse to benefits. Now, when I’m unable to work, the government’s inaction is killing me off. “Survivors are terrified to show their faces in case their benefits are cut and are dying without their due. I’m too terrified to apply for compensation, because I need housing benefit to stay independent and I’m terrified of being institutionalised again. “With the compensation, I’d be able to make it safe for me to continue living in my home.” The twins were born in an unmarried mother’s home in Belfast, the children of a Ghanaian doctor and an Irish hospital receptionist. In a climate of stigma in “theocratic” 1950s Ireland, the twins were institutionalised and separated at six years old, reuniting when they were 12. Adaser faced “relentless degradation at every level”, including abuse, neglect and forced labour in institutions in Dublin and Kilkenny. “I thought the N-word was a pet name, until an older girl slapped me across the face and said, ‘Look up the meaning.’ This is not about me saying I had it worse – in an institution where are you are beaten up before breakfast, it doesn’t matter what the colour of your skin is. But everywhere I went I was noticed, and whereas my peers could leave institutions and blend in with Irish society, I couldn’t.” At 16, Adaser was sent to a mother and baby home after she became pregnant and her own son was taken from her, before being reunited with her in adulthood. She escaped being sent to a Magdalene laundry after a progressive Irish couple, Bryan and Mary Rothery, took her in, “saved” her life and encouraged her to leave Ireland, where she faced a colour bar in employment and housing. She moved to London in 1976. She said: “The 70s was a very hard time for Irish people [in the UK] but nobody believed I was Irish, so I was able to avoid all that. I immersed myself in Black politics and had a ball in 70s London. “I will always thank the British people. They took in thousands of defeated, battered girls and allowed us to make our lives here.” Adaser, a retired housing director, now wants to meet the prime minister. Her lawyer, Caoilfhionn Gallagher KC, said: “As well as taking steps to pass Philomena’s law without delay, it’s imperative the government takes immediate action to direct local authorities that during this interim period benefits should not be affected. How much longer are elderly, distressed survivors expected to wait?” The Department for Work and Pensions has said it is “carefully considering” the situation.