Starmer admits mistake in appointing Mandelson as UK ambassador but resists calls to resign

LONDON (AP) — BritishPrime Minister Keir Starmeracknowledged Monday that he made the wrong judgment when he pickedJeffrey Epstein’s friendPeter Mandelsonas U.K. ambassador to Washington, batting away a barrage of calls to resign over a scandal that has left his leadership teetering.

Associated Press Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer leaves 10 Downing Street in London, Monday, April 20, 2026 to face a showdown in Parliament over the appointment of Peter Mandelson as ambassador to Washington.(AP Photo/Alastair Grant) Artist Kaya Mar has his last paintings referring to Keir Starmer and Peter Mandelson on display in London, Monday, April 20, 2026 as Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer is facing a showdown in Parliament over the appointment of Peter Mandelson as ambassador to Washington.(AP Photo/Alastair Grant) Peter Mandelson is seen with his dog outside his home in London, Monday, April 20, 2026 as Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer is facing a showdown in Parliament over the appointment of Peter Mandelson as ambassador to Washington.(AP Photo/Kin Cheung) Peter Mandelson is seen outside his home in London, Monday, April 20, 2026 as Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer is facing a showdown in Parliament over the appointment of Peter Mandelson as ambassador to Washington.(AP Photo/Kin Cheung) Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer leaves 10 Downing Street in London, Monday, April 20, 2026 to face a showdown in Parliament over the appointment of Peter Mandelson as ambassador to Washington.(AP Photo/Alastair Grant)

APTOPIX Britain Mandelson Starmer

Starmer said he would have withdrawn the appointment if he'd known Mandelson hadfailed security checks, as he tried to explain why Mandelson was given the U.K.'s most important diplomatic post. Starmer placed blame squarely on Foreign Office officials who he said failed to tell him about the security concerns and approved Mandelson's appointment despite them.

Starmer told lawmakers in the House of Commons that ”I would not have gone ahead with the appointment” had he known the truth. He called it “frankly staggering” that officials didn’t tell him about the failed vetting.

“At the heart of this, there is also a judgment I made that was wrong,” Starmer added. “I should not have appointed Peter Mandelson.

“I take responsibility for that decision, and I apologize again to the victims of the pedophile Jeffrey Epstein, who were clearly failed by my decision.”

Starmerfired Mandelsonin September, nine months into the job, when new details emerged about his friendship with Epstein, a convicted sex offender whodied in prison in 2019.

His explanation was greeted with jeers from opposition lawmakers, incredulous that the nation's leader hadn't known about the failed security vetting.

Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch said Starmer's lack of curiosity was hard to believe.

“It doesn’t appear that he asked any questions at all. Why? Because he didn’t want to know," she said.

Starmer denies misleading Parliament

Starmer was attempting to set the record straight after repeatedly telling lawmakers that “due process” was followed when Mandelson was appointed.

Though he apologized for his error of judgment, he denied misleading Parliament, which is usually considered a resigning offense.

Starmer fired the top Foreign Office civil servant, Olly Robbins, within hours of the revelation by The Guardian last week. But allies of Robbins say he never would have been able to share sensitive vetting information with the prime minister.

Robbins is expected to give his own version of events to the House of Commons Foreign Affairs Committee on Tuesday.

Badenoch noted that Robbins is the latest high-profile government departure linked to Mandelson. She said that instead of taking responsibility for his mistakes, Starmer "has thrown his staff and his officials under the bus.”

Ed Davey, leader of the centrist Liberal Democrats, said Starmer “gives every impression of a prime minister in office but not in power.” Davey said appointing Mandelson was "a catastrophic error of judgment. And now that it’s blown up in his face, the only decent thing to do is to take responsibility."

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Senior government colleagues have defended the prime minister. Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy said that if Starmer had known about the failed security vetting, “he would never, ever have appointed him ambassador.”

But lawmakers in Starmer’s center-left Labour Party, already anxious about its dire poll ratings, are restive. Starmer alreadydefused one potential crisisin February, when some Labour lawmakers urged him to resign over the Mandelson appointment.

He could face a new challenge if, as expected, Labour takes a hammering in local and regional elections on May 7, which give voters a chance to pass a midterm verdict on the government.

Warnings about Epstein ties went unheeded

Critics say the Mandelson appointment is more evidence of bad judgment by a prime minister who has maderepeated misstepssince he led Labour to alandslide election victoryin July 2024.

Starmer has struggled to deliver promised economic growth, repairtattered public servicesand ease the cost of living, and has been forced into repeated policy U-turns.

He picked Mandelson as ambassador despite being warned by his staff that Mandelson’s friendship with Epstein exposed the government to “reputational risk.”

Mandelson’s business links to Russia and China also set off alarm bells. But his expertise as a former European Union trade chief and contacts among global elites were considered assets in dealing with U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration.

A trove of Epstein-related documentsreleased by the U.S. Department of Justice in January included emails suggesting Mandelson had passed on sensitive, and potentially market-moving, government information to Epstein in 2009, after the global financial crisis.

British police launched a criminal probe andarrested Mandelsonin February on suspicion of misconduct in public office. Mandelson has previously denied wrongdoing andhasn’t been charged. He does not face allegations of sexual misconduct.

Starmer said he had ordered a review into any security concerns arising from Mandelson’s access to sensitive information while ambassador.

Many questions remain unanswered after Starmer's 2 1/2-hour question-and-answer session, including why Mandelson failed the vetting and whether officials felt political pressure to approve the appointment.

Several lawmakers asked why Starmer chose Mandelson for the job despite red flags.

“I’m interested in his judgment,” said Scottish National Party lawmaker Stephen Flynn. "Does he believe himself to be gullible, incompetent or both?”

Sylvia Hui and Brian Melley in London contributed reporting.

Starmer admits mistake in appointing Mandelson as UK ambassador but resists calls to resign

LONDON (AP) — BritishPrime Minister Keir Starmeracknowledged Monday that he made the wrong judgment when he pickedJeffrey Epstein’s fri...
Lebanese people displaced by Israeli strikes return to what's left of their homes

“My house is demolished.”

NBC Universal A resident inspects the rubble of a destroyed building upon his arrival back to the southern Lebanese city of Nabatieh on April 18. (Fadel Itani / AFP - Getty Images)

Imad Komeyha and his family spent 12 hours traveling fromnorthern Lebanonback to Kfar Sir, a village in the south, only to find their house in ruins, laid to wasteamid Israeli airstrikes.

He had been among 1 million people displaced by Israel’s invasion, launched in March after Hezbollah, a powerful Iran-backed force in Lebanon separate from the government, fired rockets from Lebanon in retaliation for the U.S.-Israeliwar with Iran.

President Donald Trump announced Thursday that the leaders of Israel and Lebanon had reacheda 10-day ceasefire deal, but many returning to their homes in southern Lebanonfound only destruction.

“I am devastated,” Komeyha, a 62-year-old political analyst, told NBC News. “My eldest son is married and has a baby. He lives downstairs, in the same building, his house is also gone.”

Imad Komeyha and his family found their home in Kfar Sir, a village in the south, in ruins. (Imad Komeyha / Supplied)

Komeyha said it was the third time his family had been displaced, after fleeing the village in 2006 and 2024, and he was tired of repeating the cycle of loss and return. “How many times do we need to leave our houses?” he said. “My whole family is homeless, and we want to stay despite everything.”

While the ceasefire has opened a narrow window for displaced families to return to the south, it has done little to resolve the conflict or guarantee their safety.

Across the region, hundreds of thousands are weighing whether to return to homes that may no longer exist, even as Israeli forces remain and the risk of renewed violence lingers.

A French peacekeeper was killed Saturday and three others wounded after a United Nations patrol came under fire, with French President Emmanuel Macron blaming Hezbollah. The same day, an Israeli Defense Forces soldier was killed and nine others were wounded by an explosive.

Israeli strikes have killed more than 2,100 people in Lebanon since Israel’s invasion began, according to figures from the Lebanese Health Ministry.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Saturday that the IDF would “continue to operate in the security zone” it has established in southern Lebanon “in order to thwart threats directed at them and at our communities, in accordance with the ceasefire agreement.” The Lebanese army has warned people to avoid “approaching areas where Israeli occupation forces have advanced.”

While those warnings have not stopped people from returning, they have deepened a sense of fear and uncertainty.

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Adeeb Farhat, a 34-year-old filmmaker from Arab Salim, feared Israel could “attack us an any minute,” but he had still made the journey home to the south.

“To tell you the truth, this time it is extremely scary, but we can’t help it, we have to come and check on our houses. Our feeling of belonging is very strong,” he said.

Others are preparing to follow despite the risks.

Ikbal Daher, a housewife from Qana in southern Lebanon, told NBC News on Friday that she planned on heading back to her village over the weekend. “We know as a fact that there is a massive destruction of buildings and infrastructure in Qana,” Daher, 40, said, but “we are excited, happy and proud.”

“Yes, we don’t trust Israel, and we might be exposed to airstrikes, but we don’t care,” she added.

While some move forward with cautious determination, the ceasefire itself remains fragile and conditional. The deal commits Israel and Lebanon to “engaging in good-faith direct negotiations, facilitated by the United States, with the objective of achieving a comprehensive agreement that ensures lasting security, stability, and peace between the two countries,” the State Department said.

Lebanon’s government must “take meaningful steps”to prevent Hezbollahfrom carrying out any attacks on Israel, the statement added, while Israel “shall preserve its right to take all necessary measures in self-defense, at any time, against planned, imminent, or ongoing attacks.”

Hezbollah said its fighters’ fingers would remain “on the trigger” in case Israel violates the ceasefire. On Saturday, the group issued “five points” that it wants to see fulfilled as part of the ceasefire agreement between Lebanon and Israel.

Those include a permanent end of air, land and sea attacks on Lebanon, the withdrawal of Israel from occupied areas in southern Lebanon, the release of prisoners, the return of residents to their homes on the border, and the reconstruction of the area with international support, Naim Qassem, the secretary-general of Hezbollah, said.

Despite uncertainty over the ceasefire’s extension into a longer-term deal and the fate of the region, some people returning to southern Lebanon were steadfast in their determination to rebuild their lives there.

Ali Eid, a high school instructor from Maarakah, found his house and most of the village reduced to rubble. (Ali Eid)

Ali Eid, a high school instructor from Maarakah in the south, returned with his five children only to find his house and most of the village reduced to rubble, but the 60-year-old said he felt “happy and sad at the same time,” overjoyed to see his neighbors again.

“Our losses are incredible. Many people got killed, all our belongings are gone, all our achievements vanished,” he added. “This is not easy, but life and survival are stronger.”

Lebanese people displaced by Israeli strikes return to what's left of their homes

“My house is demolished.” Imad Komeyha and his family spent 12 hours traveling fromnorthern Lebanonback to Kfar Sir, a village in...
U.K. police probe if Iranian proxies are behind attacks on Jewish sites

An arson attack caused smoke damage at a synagogue in North London overnight, just one dayafter a similar incident in the cityand the third such occurence this week, British officials said Sunday. The Metropolitan Police said its counterterrorism officers are investigating if the spate of attacks are linked to Iranian proxies.

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The latest attack caused minor smoke damage to a room at Kenton United Synagogue in Harrow, London, according to the Community Security Trust, which provides safety advice to Jewish groups. No injuries were reported.

The Metropolitan Police said its officers noticed damage to the window of the building on Saturday night. Photos from Sunday morning show forensic officers and other law enforcement inspecting the cordoned-off scen.

"On further inspection they saw smoke inside a room and evidence that a bottle with some sort of accelerant had been thrown through the window," the department said in a statement.

A police forensic officer works inside a cordon at Kenton United Synagogue in London on April 19, 2026. / Credit: JUSTIN TALLIS /AFP via Getty Images

Late Friday, a building that formerly housed a Jewish charity was targeted in Hendon, a neighborhood in north London near Harrow. There were no injuries reported.

On Wednesday, police arrested two people over an arson attack on a synagogue in nearby Finchley. In late March, four Jewish community ambulances were torched in Golders Green, also in north London. Police are also investigating an attack on a Persian-language media company.

Deputy Assistant Commissioner Vicki Evans said a little-known group,Harakat Ashab al-Yamin al-Islamiya, with links to Iran, has claimed responsibility for many of the attacks. The group previously claimed similar attacks in Belgium and the Netherlands.

"We are aware of public reporting that suggests this group may have links to Iran. As you would expect, we will continue to explore that question as our investigation evolves," she said.

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"I've spoken previously about the Iranian regime's use of criminal proxies, and we're considering whether this tactic is being used here in London," Evans added.

Officers have stepped up patrols in areas with large Jewish populations. The Community Security Trust hasrecorded3,700 antisemitic incidents in the United Kingdom in 2025, the second-highest total ever reported to the organization.

British chief rabbi Ephraim Mirviswrote on social mediathat the recent attacks show that a "sustained campaign of violence and intimidation against the Jewish community in the UK is gathering momentum."

"Thank God, no lives have been lost, but we cannot, and must not, wait for that to change before we understand just how dangerous this moment is for all of our society," Mirvis wrote.

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said he was "appalled" by the recent attcks.

"This is abhorrent and it will not be tolerated. Attacks on our Jewish community are attacks on Britain," Starmer said in a post on X. "We will not rest in the pursuit of perpetrators."

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Trump accuses Iran of violating ceasefire with Strait of Hormuz ship attacks

President Donald Trump said Sunday that Iran had violated the ceasefire agreement with the U.S. by attacking ships in the Strait of Hormuz, and he repeated threats to attack Iranian energy infrastructure unless it accepts a deal to end the war.

NBC Universal

“Iran decided to fire bullets yesterday in the Strait of Hormuz — A Total Violation of our Ceasefire Agreement!” he posted on Truth Social. “That wasn’t nice, was it?”

“We’re offering a very fair and reasonable DEAL, and I hope they take it because, if they don’t, the United States is going to knock out every single Power Plant, and every single Bridge, in Iran,” he continued. “NO MORE MR. NICE GUY!”

His comments came as faltering diplomacy between the two sides saw Iran reimpose an effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz on Saturday, citing acontinued U.S. naval blockade of Iranian ports, just one day after declaring the waterway “completely open” under the current ceasefire.

Trump said that Iran had targeted vessels from France and the United Kingdom, without providing further details. Maritime authorities on Saturday reported gunfire and a projectile strikeinvolving Indian vesselsin the strait. Iranian state media has confirmed that shots were fired near the two Indian ships to force them to turn back.

Iran’s semiofficial Tasnim news agency reported two more tankers, sailing under the flags of Botswana and Angola, were forced to turn back by Iran’s forces on Sunday.

Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps has warned vessels against trying to cross the strait, which it said would be considered “cooperation with the enemy,” adding that “any violating vessels would be targeted.”

Trump said negotiators would arrive on Monday evening in Islamabad, Pakistan, which last weekend hosted direct talks between the two sides, with the current two-week ceasefire set to end on Wednesday.

However, Iran's semiofficial Tasnim news agency reported that Iran has not yet decided to send a negotiating delegation, and that there will be no negotiations as long as the U.S. naval blockade remains.

U.N. Ambassador Mike Waltz told NBC News' "Meet the Press" of the planned talks: "We'll see what the Iranians decide to do. They can choose to be a responsible member of the international community, or they can continue to be a rogue regime that masters its own people and seeks to hold the world hostage with a nuclear weapon."

"Everything’s on the table," he said, suggesting that mixed messaging from Iran on the status of the strait was an indication of "real confusion on the Iranians’ part" and "discord within their ranks."

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Iranian officials said Saturday that new U.S. proposals were under review.Iran’s Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said Saturday thatprogress has been made toward a peace deal, with some issues “concluded,” but he warned Iran still has a “complete distrust” of the U.S. negotiators.

Speaking on state TV on Saturday night, Ghalibaf, who also serves as Iran’s chief negotiator, said officials had “stated our demands firmly,” adding: “Some issues in the negotiations have been concluded, while others have not. There is still a distance to a final agreement.”

“There must be a guarantee that this cycle of war, ceasefire and negotiation will not be repeated,” he said.

Ghalibaf said the strait had been closed because the U.S. was only “partially implementing the ceasefire,” adding that it will remain closed if the “naval blockade against us continues.”

“If the ceasefire is not implemented, we will not continue negotiations, and we will start the war,” he said.

Trump convened a Cabinet meeting in the situation room Saturday morning to discuss the Strait of Hormuz and the situation in Iran, according to two U.S. officials with knowledge of the meeting.

He had earlier said that his administration was currently talking to Iran and that talks were going “very well.”

But Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said Sunday that Trump was seeking to deny Iran its “nuclear rights” and that Iran was trying to end the war “with full dignity.”

“If a human being does not defend himself, he is dead,” he said. “They attacked us, and we defended.”

The Trump administration said its blockade of Iranian ports remains in force, with more than 20 ships turned back since Monday.

Following a summit of 51 countries that was co-chaired by France and the U.K. on Friday, French President Emmanuel Macron and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer “called for the unconditional, unrestricted, and immediate re-opening of the Strait of Hormuz.”

They also announced a joint neutral mission to provide reassurance to merchant vessels in the region.

Trump accuses Iran of violating ceasefire with Strait of Hormuz ship attacks

President Donald Trump said Sunday that Iran had violated the ceasefire agreement with the U.S. by attacking ships in the Strait of Hor...
U.K. police probe if Iranian proxies are behind attacks on Jewish sites

An arson attack caused smoke damage at a synagogue in North London overnight, just one dayafter a similar incident in the cityand the third such occurence this week, British officials said Sunday. The Metropolitan Police said its counterterrorism officers are investigating if the spate of attacks are linked to Iranian proxies.

CBS News

The latest attack caused minor smoke damage to a room at Kenton United Synagogue in Harrow, London, according to the Community Security Trust, which provides safety advice to Jewish groups. No injuries were reported.

The Metropolitan Police said its officers noticed damage to the window of the building on Saturday night. Photos from Sunday morning show forensic officers and other law enforcement inspecting the cordoned-off scen.

"On further inspection they saw smoke inside a room and evidence that a bottle with some sort of accelerant had been thrown through the window," the department said in a statement.

A police forensic officer works inside a cordon at Kenton United Synagogue in London on April 19, 2026. / Credit: JUSTIN TALLIS /AFP via Getty Images

Late Friday, a building that formerly housed a Jewish charity was targeted in Hendon, a neighborhood in north London near Harrow. There were no injuries reported.

On Wednesday, police arrested two people over an arson attack on a synagogue in nearby Finchley. In late March, four Jewish community ambulances were torched in Golders Green, also in north London. Police are also investigating an attack on a Persian-language media company.

Deputy Assistant Commissioner Vicki Evans said a little-known group,Harakat Ashab al-Yamin al-Islamiya, with links to Iran, has claimed responsibility for many of the attacks. The group previously claimed similar attacks in Belgium and the Netherlands.

"We are aware of public reporting that suggests this group may have links to Iran. As you would expect, we will continue to explore that question as our investigation evolves," she said.

Advertisement

"I've spoken previously about the Iranian regime's use of criminal proxies, and we're considering whether this tactic is being used here in London," Evans added.

Officers have stepped up patrols in areas with large Jewish populations. The Community Security Trust hasrecorded3,700 antisemitic incidents in the United Kingdom in 2025, the second-highest total ever reported to the organization.

British chief rabbi Ephraim Mirviswrote on social mediathat the recent attacks show that a "sustained campaign of violence and intimidation against the Jewish community in the UK is gathering momentum."

"Thank God, no lives have been lost, but we cannot, and must not, wait for that to change before we understand just how dangerous this moment is for all of our society," Mirvis wrote.

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said he was "appalled" by the recent attcks.

"This is abhorrent and it will not be tolerated. Attacks on our Jewish community are attacks on Britain," Starmer said in a post on X. "We will not rest in the pursuit of perpetrators."

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U.K. police probe if Iranian proxies are behind attacks on Jewish sites

An arson attack caused smoke damage at a synagogue in North London overnight, just one dayafter a similar incident in the cityand the t...
Remains found in car ID'd as family who mysteriously vanished in 1958

DNA analysis has identified theremains found in a carin the Columbia River as those of an Oregon family that went missing in 1958 while on a trip to find Christmas greenery, authorities said Thursday.

CBS News

The state medical examiner's office has identified parents Kenneth and Barbara Martin and their daughter Barbie from remains located in the river within the wreckage of the car, the Hood River County Sheriff's Officesaid. The sheriff's office said it concluded its investigation and found no evidence of a crime.

The Ford station wagon thought to belong to the family was found in 2024 by Archer Mayo, a diver who had been looking for it for several years. Authorities pulled part of the car from the river the following year.

he Hood River County Sheriff's Office and a team of divers retrieve a vehicle from the Columbia River, March 7, 2025, in Cascade Locks, Ore.  / Credit: Beth Nakamura/The Oregonian via AP, File

The family vanished in December of 1958. The bodies of two of the family's children were found months after the disappearance, but the other members never turned up.

The search for the Martin family was a national news story at the time and led some to speculate about the possibility of foul play, with a $1,000 reward offered for information.

"Where do you search if you've already searched every place logic and fragmentary clues would suggest?" an Associated Press article asked in 1959, months after the disappearance.

Only the frame and some attached components were retrieved from the water because of the "extent to which the vehicle had been encased in sediment," the sheriff's office said. Analysis of those items allowed investigators to conclude that it was indeed the Martin family's car.

This Christmas photo provided by the Ken Martin family shows, from left, Barbara, Ken, Barbara, Sue, Donald and Virginia in December 1952 in Portland, Ore.  / Credit: AP

Later in 2025, Mayo located human remains that were ultimately turned over to the state medical examiner's office.

Scientists developed DNA extracts from the remains and generated a profile that was compared with relatives of the Martin family, allowing for the identifications, authorities said.

Othram, a DNA lab in Texas,did forensic analysis on the remains, which ultimately led to the positive identification.

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Othram's Colby Lasyonetold CBS affiliate KOIN-TVthat more than a dozen experts worked on the case, noting they extracted a bone sample and used advanced techniques to isolate and analyze the DNA. DNA comparisons with a living relative positively identified Kenneth Martin.

"Skeletal remains that have been submerged in water for decades can be particularly challenging to work with," Lasyone said. "Unfortunately, the skeletal remains for the other individuals were too degraded and couldn't be worked with."

Mayo also found remnants of a shoe and a camera case with Kenneth's name and address, seat belt buckles and camera film, KOIN-TV reported.

"Maybe there'll be pictures published one day of what that is, because that's a pretty cool piece to a mystery," he told the the station.

Mayo told KOIN-TV he was gratified the case was finally solved.

"It's not going to get more resolved than it is now and so that feels good," he told the station. "And that really lets us write the last chapter of that book."

In 2020,KOIN-TV did a four-part podcast on the case.

Searchers return to the spot in 1999, where they believed the Martin family may have disappeared and compared the scene with a photo of it from 1959, front.  / Credit: The Oregonian via AP, file

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6 killed after gunman opens fire in Kyiv, Ukrainian officials say

A gunman who killed at least six people in Kyiv, Ukraine's capital, before taking hostages and barricading himself inside a supermarket on Saturday has been shot and killed by police, Ukrainian officialssaid.

CBS News

Ukraine's special tactical police units stormed the store after attempts to contact the gunman with a negotiator failed, the head of Ukraine's Interior Ministry, Ihor Klymenko, said in a statement on social media. The attacker was killed while resisting arrest, he said.

Speaking to reporters at the scene, Klymenko said that the gunman had killed four bystanders while on the street, before entering the supermarket and killing a fifth person.

Mayor Vitali Klitschko said that a sixth victim, a young woman, died from her injuries in the hospital.

An Associated Press reporter on the scene saw the bodies of the victims in the street covered by emergency blankets before they were taken away.

Police officers are seen at the site where a gunman killed at least six people in the streets before being shot dead by police, in Kyiv, Ukraine, Saturday, April 18, 2026. / Credit: Dan Bashakov / AP

Klymenko said the shooter was born in 1968 but gave no further details as to his identity. Police negotiators spoke with the attacker for roughly 40 minutes before storming the building, he said.

Before the gunman was shot, a female police negotiator, wearing body armor and standing behind an armored vehicle, used a loudspeaker to call out to the assailant, urging him: "the people are not to blame for this. Please, let them go and we will talk with you."

"We tried to persuade him, knowing that there was likely a wounded person inside. We even offered to bring in tourniquets to stop the bleeding, but he did not respond," Klymenko said. "Consequently, the order was given to neutralize him."

Klymenko, who wore body armor, said the man was carrying a carbine. The short-barrel assault rifle was legally registered, he added.

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Last December, the assailant "approached the licensing authorities to have the weapon test-fired as the permit was expiring. He provided a medical certificate. He had also submitted an application to renew his permit for the weapon. That is all we can say for now," Klymenko said.

A police officer inspects the site where a gunman killed at least six people in the streets before being shot dead by police, in Kyiv, Ukraine, Saturday, April 18, 2026. / Credit: Dan Bashakov / AP

He added that the investigation will determine which medical institution issued the certificate.

The shooting took place in Kyiv's Holosiivskyi district, the mayor said. Televised footage of the scene showed police taking cover in the shopping mall that housed the supermarket while shots were fired. Bystanders were escorted away from the scene.

Shooting comes as Russia and Ukraine trade strikes

Also on Saturday, a civilian waskilled in Donetskand dozens more were wounded in overnight attacks by Russia. Local officials reported at least 26 people had been hurt in attacks across northern and eastern Ukraine, including a strike onport infrastructurein the city of Odesa.

Elsewhere, a Ukrainian drone strike targeted industrial areas in Novokuibyshevsk and Syzran in Russia's Samara region, Gov. Vyacheslav Fedorishchev said Saturday. He did not give further details, but the General Staff of Ukraine's Armed Forces said in a statement that it had hit major oil refineries in both cities. It also said that its attacks had sparked fires at the Vystosk oil terminal in Russia's northwestern Leningrad region and an oil refinery in the southern Krasnodar region, with the blazes later confirmed by Russian officials.

Russia's Ministry of Defense said that its forces destroyed 258 Ukrainian drones overnight over 16 Russian regions, as well as over the annexed Ukrainian peninsula of Crimea and the Black and Azov seas.

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