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A man who served as an aide to a former Ukrainian president has been shot and killed in Madrid, local authorities have said.

Unidentified gunmen shot former politician Andriy Portnov, 51, outside the gates of the American School of Madrid in the Pozuelo area of the Spanish capital on Wednesday morning, according to a source close to the investigation.

“Several persons shot him in the back and the head”, according to an Interior Ministry source, before they “fled towards a forest area”.

Police received the report at 9.15am local time and rushed to Calle America, where Mr Portnov is believed to have been taking his children to school, radio station Cadena SER said.

Emergency service vehicles and a police cordon were pictured at the scene.

Andriy Portnov .
Pic: Reuters
Image:
Andriy Portnov. Pic: Reuters

Viktor Yanukovych and Andriy Portnov shake hands in Kyiv.
Pic: Reuters
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Andriy Portnov (right) shakes hands with Viktor Yanukovich in Kyiv in 2010. File pic: Reuters

Mr Portnov served as a senior aide to Ukraine‘s former president Viktor Yanukovich before he was ousted in 2014.

The pro-Russian leader was driven out by Ukraine’s 2014 Orange Revolution – and has been living in exile in Russia ever since.

After fleeing Ukraine in 2014, Mr Portnov is believed to have lived briefly in Russia before moving to Austria. It is not known when he moved to Spain.

Ukraine’s secret security service opened a state treason investigation into him in 2018 over claims he was involved in Russia’s illegal annexation of Crimea in 2014 – but closed it in 2019.

He was sanctioned by the US in 2021, being designated as someone “responsible for or complicit in, or (who) has directly or indirectly engaged in, corruption, including the misappropriation of state assets, the expropriation of private assets for personal gain, corruption related to government contracts or the extraction of natural resources, or bribery”.

A police officer stands guard near the spot where former Ukrainian politician Andriy Portnov, according to the Spain's Interior Ministry, was shot and killed by unidentified gunmen, outside a school in a wealthy suburb of Madrid, in Madrid, Spain May 21, 2025. REUTERS/Nacho Doce
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Police officers at the scene where Andriy Portnov was shot. Pic: Reuters

A cordon at the scene in Madrid. Pic: Reuters
Image:
A cordon at the scene in Madrid. Pic: Reuters

Members of the forensic team work at the scene where former Ukrainian politician Andriy Portnov  was shot by unidentified gunmen.
Pic: Reuters
Image:
Pic: Reuters

Emergency vehicles at the scene. Pic: 112 Madrid
Image:
Emergency vehicles at the scene. Pic: 112 Madrid

Emergency vehicles at the scene. Pic: 112 Madrid
Image:
Pic: 112 Madrid

Since Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, crimes have been committed against several high-profile Russians and Ukrainians in Spain, which has large ex-pat populations from both countries.

In November and December 2022, six letter bombs were sent to targets across the country, to Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, the Ukrainian Embassy in Madrid, as well as its US counterpart.

A 76-year-old retired Spanish civil servant was jailed over the offences after his social media searches suggested he was sympathetic towards Russia’s invasion.

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Emergency vehicles at the scene. Pic: 112 Madrid
Image:
Pic: 112 Madrid

In April that year, a Russian businessman linked to the country’s Novatek gas company was found dead with his wife and daughter, having all sustained stab wounds.

In February last year, a Russian pilot who defected to the Ukrainian side was found dead with gunshot wounds in the car park of his apartment near Alicante.

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Putin visits Kursk region for first time since Ukrainian troops ejected

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Putin visits Kursk region for first time since Ukrainian troops ejected

Vladimir Putin has visited Kursk for the first time since his troops ejected Ukrainian forces from the Russian city.

The Russian president met with volunteer organisations and visited a nuclear power plant in the region on Tuesday, the Kremlin said.

Mr Putin said late last month that his forces had ejected Ukrainian troops from the Kursk region, which ended the largest incursion into Russian territory since the Second World War.

Pic: Kremlin News/Telegram
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Vladimir Putin during his visit in the Kursk region on Tuesday. Pic: Kremlin News/Telegram

Vladimir Putin visits the under construction Kursk-II nuclear power plant  in the Kursk Region, Russia.
Pic: Kremlin.ru/Reuters
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Mr Putin visited a nuclear power plant. Pic: Kremlin.ru/Reuters

Ukraine launched its attack in August last year, using swarms of drones and heavy Western weaponry to smash through the Russian border, controlling nearly 540sq m (5,813sq ft) of Kursk at the height of the incursion.

More than 159 Ukrainian drones were shot down over Russian territory, Russia’s defence ministry said on Wednesday.

The majority were over Russia’s western regions, but at least six drones were shot down over the densely populated Moscow region, the ministry added.

An up-to-date map showing the Russian and Ukrainian gains
An up-to-date map showing the Russian and Ukrainian territorial gains

The visit in the Kursk region comes as a Russian missile attack killed six soldiers and injured 10 more during training in the Sumy region of Ukraine, according to the country’s national guard.

The commander of the unit has been suspended and an internal investigation has been launched.

Pic: Kremlin News/Telegram
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The Russian president met with volunteer organisations. Pic: Kremlin News/Telegram

Russia’s defence ministry claimed the attack on the training camp in northeastern Ukraine killed up to 70 Ukrainian servicemen, including 20 instructors.

The attack comes after US President Donald Trump spoke to both Mr Putin and Volodymyr Zelenskyy, urging them to restart ceasefire talks.

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But German defence minister Boris Pistorius said on Wednesday that Mr Trump misjudged his influence on Mr Putin after the call between the American and Russian leaders yielded no progress in Ukraine peace talks.

Europe has since announced new sanctions on Russia over the war in Ukraine. Mr Pistorius said it remained to be seen whether the US would join those measures.

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Three dead and two missing after floods hit southern France – reports

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Three dead and two missing after floods hit southern France - reports

Three people have died after severe thunderstorms caused flooding in the Var region of southeastern France, according to reports.

The rain has also caused widespread damage as Meteo-France, the country’s national weather agency, placed the region under an orange alert for rain, flooding and thunderstorms, French broadcaster BFM TV reported.

Two of those who died were an elderly couple who were in their car as it was swept away by floodwaters in the seaside town of Le Lavandou, France 24 reported.

Meanwhile, the gendarmerie said around 2.30pm local time (1:30pm UK time) that a person had been found drowned in their vehicle in the commune of Vidauban.

Le Lavandou and the commune of Bormes-les-Mimosas were particularly hard hit by the storms.

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Gil Bernardi, mayor of Le Lavandou, said during a press conference: “The roads, the bridges, the paving stones, there is no more electricity, water, or wastewater treatment plant. The shock is significant because the phenomenon is truly violent and incomprehensible.

“As we speak, an entire part of the commune is inaccessible.”

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Power and water outages were also reported in the town of Cavaliere where 250mm of rain fell in the space of one hour.

A parking lot collapsed in the town, and dozens of people were rescued, according to the authorities.

Around 200 firefighters and 35 gendarmes have reportedly been responding to the floods in Var.

Meteo-France had recorded cumulative rainfall exceeding 10cm as of 10am local time.

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Japanese minister resigns after saying he’s never bought rice because he gets it free

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Japanese minister resigns after saying he's never bought rice because he gets it free

Japan’s agriculture minister has resigned after saying he has “never had to buy rice” while the country struggles with shortages and rising costs of its staple grain.

Taku Eto offered his resignation to Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba on Wednesday after he made the comments at a party seminar on Sunday.

Mr Eto said his supporters have always gifted him rice, meaning he does not have to buy it himself.

His comments immediately sparked a public backlash.

“I made an extremely inappropriate remark at a time when consumers are struggling with soaring rice prices,” Mr Eto told reporters after handing in his resignation at the prime minister’s office.

He told the Kyodo news agency: “I asked myself whether it is appropriate for me to stay at the helm [of the agriculture ministry] at a critical time for rice prices, and I concluded that it is not.

“Once again, I apologise to people for making extremely inappropriate comments as minister when they are struggling with surging rice prices.”

Opposition parties had threatened to submit a no-confidence motion against him if Mr Eto did not resign voluntarily by Wednesday afternoon.

Japan has been struggling with rice shortages since hot weather resulted in a poor harvest in 2023.

The Japanese government's emergency rice reserves in Saitama Prefecture in March. Pic: AP
Image:
The Japanese government’s emergency rice reserves in Saitama Prefecture in March. Pic: AP

More recently, a government preparedness warning ahead of a major earthquake last August prompted panic buying – squeezing supplies even further.

Politicians have also blamed the rising cost of fertiliser and other related goods.

The crisis has seen the government release vast quantities of rice from its emergency stockpiles for the first time.

In April, Japan also imported the grain from South Korea for the first time in 25 years in a further bid to boost supplies and lower prices.

But shelf prices have continued to rise, reaching 4,268 yen (£22) per 5kg in the week to 11 May – double what it was a year ago.

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Mr Eto has been replaced by Shinjiro Koizumi, a former environment minister who ran unsuccessfully against the prime minister for the Liberal Democratic Party leadership last year.

The rice crisis is placing further strain on Mr Ishiba’s minority government – ahead of the country’s upcoming elections in July.

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