Global News Podcast - Minnesota Democratic politician killed in targeted shooting
Episode Date: June 15, 2025The search in the US for the man who shot dead a Democratic politician in a targeted killing. Also: Israel and Iran threaten to step up their attacks, and getting away from the electro-magnetic radiat...ion of modern life.
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He was a huge music star with millions of fans around the globe.
He was like a household name.
An international icon.
But his fame came at a cost.
The Indian singer and rapper Siddhu Moosewala has been shot dead near his home in the North
Indian state of Punjab.
I'm Ishleen Kaur and I spent the last two years searching for answers.
Who wanted Sidhu Musewala dead and why?
Sidhu Musewala's murder can't be just an open and shut case.
World of Secrets, the killing call from the BBC World Service.
Listen now wherever you get your BBC podcasts.
This is the Global News Podcast from the BBC World Service.
I'm Nigel Adderley and in the early hours of Sunday the 15th of June, these are our main stories.
A huge man hunters underway in the US state of Minnesota for a gunman
who shot dead a democratic politician and her husband. The authorities say it was a
targeted attack. Many US towns and cities have stepped up security, as protests against
Donald Trump are held to coincide with a big military parade in Washington. And Israel
and Iran have threatened to step up their military confrontation.
Also in this podcast... There are plenty of reasons which could explain these trends. For
instance, our changing attitudes to smoke, improvements when it comes to diagnosing things
like hearing loss and diabetes, these known associated risks of dementia. We hear about
a new study into why younger generations
may be at less risk of developing dementia.
The US state of Minnesota is reeling after two shootings
that appear to be linked and politically motivated.
In the early hours of Saturday morning,
Democratic state politician Melissa Hortman and her husband
were shot dead at their home in the city of Champlain. A short time earlier, and just
a few kilometers away, Democratic state lawmaker John Hoffman and his wife were shot by the
same gunman and left gravely injured. Speaking at a news conference, Minnesota Governor Tim
Walz said the attack seemed to be an act of targeted political violence.
We're here today because an unspeakable tragedy has unfolded in Minnesota. My good friend and colleague,
Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband Mark, were shot and killed early this morning in what appears to be a politically motivated assassination.
Our state lost a great leader and I lost a dearest of friends.
Our state lost a great leader and I lost a dearest of friends. A suspect has now been identified. Our North America correspondent Jake Kwon
told us more about him. He is a man in his 50s whose name is
Vance Luther Bolter. He's a local man and the police have released his face as
well as his outfit. He was wearing a cowboy hat and holding a
dark bag. They'd released also a photo of the man as he approached the houses of the lawmakers.
And in the photo, you can see him wearing these black vest as well as holding a torch.
What they say is him dressed like a police officer and that he was driving SUV that is typically driven by law enforcement.
So they said that the manhunt is still going on. Earlier they said hundreds of police officers and SWAT
team is activated to find this man and they fear that the man may be out of the
region. Now they last have spotted him in the city of Minneapolis away from where
the shooting happened. So they really urged the public to share any
information they may have if they spot this man. We also heard from community
leaders in Minnesota at the press conference,
and really they summed up what we heard from Tim Voelz earlier on, just the sense of shock.
It really is. I mean, Minnesota, they really pride themselves on their friendliness,
their easygoing attitude, and this is a state known for their civility, really.
And we also heard from the White House, President Trump saying that this is a horrific killing, that he had ordered the FBI and the Justice
Department to investigate the matter and that the person responsible will be held to account
to the fullest extent of the law. And he said that there is no place in America for a political
motivated killing, that it will not be tolerated. You know, it's really unfortunate, but this
politically motivated killing, it really feels like tolerated. You know, it's really unfortunate, but this politically motivated killing, it really feels
like there's an increasing number of them.
We are now in a very politically charged atmosphere here in the United States.
Just a few months ago, there was an arson attack on the Pennsylvania governor's residence.
And of course, everyone will remember the near assassination of President Trump himself.
And of course, this comes on the day that people across the country have taken to the streets to protest against Donald Trump's
military parade taking place in Washington today.
We're going to show D.C. what it's all said and done, that the power of the people...
I am very appalled by the actions and the rhetoric from our government. And I did not vote that way.
And I'm trying to change things because this is not what's happening in America now is
not the real America.
And Jake, you used the term politically charged earlier.
And really, that sums it term politically charged earlier and really
that sums it up. It really does. I mean, this parade itself is very controversial. It is
supposed to celebrate the American might, the American nationalism on the 250th birthday
of the U.S. military. But it also happens to fall on the same day as President Trump's
79th birthday. And there will be more than 6,000 soldiers, 150 vehicles, and 50
aircraft.
There will be fireworks, et cetera.
But the people who are opposed to President Trump,
they're criticizing it as the personal vanity project.
And they're really using it as a day of defiance
against President Trump.
And just a final point to make, and it's a significant one
to make, that there were planned marches in Minnesota and they've now been cancelled.
In the US media, it was reported that police found manifesto as well as some other material
in the suspect's car.
One of them was a flyer for today's No Kings protest.
So the authorities now fear that this suspect may be moving somewhere to harm the people
who are participating in the rally. You know, it is not clear yet what exactly is the motivation for this
suspect and whether it has any connection to the rally.
Jake Kwan. As we record this podcast over the last few hours more than a
hundred missiles have been fired into Israel. That's according to Iranian
state television. As both countries continue to carry out air attacks on each other,
the Iranians say that Tel Aviv and Haifa are the main targets.
In northern Israel, fire and rescue services reported
they had to respond to several incidents,
and the authorities told citizens to take shelter.
Meanwhile, Iranian media have reported a massive explosion
at a refinery in the southern port
of Kangan, and two more senior Iranian military commanders and three nuclear scientists have
been killed.
Earlier, the Iranian president had warned of a more severe response to Israeli attacks,
while in Jerusalem, the Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Iran had seen nothing
yet. So a ratcheting of rhetoric
on both sides. As our correspondent in Jerusalem, Ioni Wells explains.
There's been some really strong words from Benjamin Netanyahu this evening. He has said
that in the near future Israeli air force jets will be over Tehran skies and they would
strike what he described as every
target of the Ayatollah regime.
We had information that this unscrupulous regime was planning to give the nuclear weapons
that they would develop to their terrorist proxies.
That's nuclear terrorism on steroids.
That would threaten the entire world.
This is what Israel is doing with the support,
the clear support of the President of the United States, Donald Trump, and the American people,
and many others in the world. So with God's help and with the goodwill and resolution of all free
societies, we shall win. Now that is significant. It shows confidence after Israel has indicated that it's defeated,
certainly dented severely, a lot of Iran's defense capabilities, particularly over Tehran.
And it also suggests that, as many people have been speculating, that this is not just
about targeting Iran's nuclear capacity. It's also about targeting the regime itself.
That's been echoed by Benjamin
Netanyahu also calling on the Iranian people last night to rise up against their leadership,
but also Iran confirming today that a senior adviser to the Supreme Leader died from his
wounds. He was somebody also responsible for the nuclear programs. Very strong rhetoric
from Iran too. Iran has said to the US, UK, France that it would hit military
bases in the region if those nations join in and stop missile strikes on Israel. Iran's
president has also threatened a more severe response if Israel continues its attacks.
Ioni Wells. But how damaging have the strikes been for Iran and what are Tehran's options
for retaliation now?
Sanam Vakil is a Middle East analyst.
She says the Iranian leadership knows that, for the moment at least, Israel is militarily stronger.
I think that the Islamic Republic is in an extraordinarily difficult moment, one that
it hasn't experienced since the 1980 to 88 Iran-Iraq war.
So it is prioritizing its own survival.
It is looking to deal very heavy blows to Israel, whatever it can, but it will
also be looking for an off ramp.
Iran is the weaker party here and it cannot fight on equal footing against Israel.
There is going to be a time where it will be waiting
for those diplomatic channels to open.
We got through to a journalist in the Iranian capital
who told us about the situation there.
For his safety, we are not giving his name.
Many people in Tehran didn't sleep a wink last night,
including me.
Of course, I fell asleep at 3 a.m.
And three hours I had the airy pants flashing in the skies,
trembling in my bed and trying to digest my anxiety.
So many people, I can say, share the same anxiety and nervousness.
So you think a lot of people at the moment are very scared and
maybe it's a fear of the unknown? Yes, and also a very tiny minority, those who are pro-monarchy,
they feel powerless and paralyzed to take any initiative to do something to topple their hated
regimes. They have a wishful thinking that, okay, our savior is
Netanyahu, he will be able to do what we have failed to do. But at the same time, the overwhelming
majority of the people just want security, peace, a predictable future. They have been
deprived for decades.
Is there a fear the attacks could get worse this evening and moving forward in the coming
days?
Yes, there is a fear. And when people go to bed or when the dark falls, they worry and
they don't go to bed just in time and get ready just anything happens to save the family. In the daytime in Tehran today, have people been
going about their business? Are they using supermarkets? Are they going to shops or are
people staying indoors? No, people do their errands but they come back very shortly home and they try to save some things in a store and a stock up groceries, whatever it's called,
staple food. Do people have shelters? We've seen members of the public in Israel heading down to
bomb shelters overnight. Are there similar provisions in Tehran? No, we don't have the luxury
of shelters. We have a subway which which is very good and clean, comparing to
Cairo, subways or somewhere else. But subways are not open to the people after 10.30. Otherwise,
you can go to the basement of your own building, which is the ruling establishment since the
beginning of the revolution, has never ever thought about the shelters because there is a culture which is the culture
of martyrdoms. So in this society going to the shelters when there is a jet fighting
or looming around it indicates your chicken heartness. So you should brave and brace for
the bombardments and enjoy martyrdom. A journalist in Tehran.
Only hours after Israel launched its attacks on Iran, news broke that six top nuclear
scientists and the number of high-profile members of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard
Corps had been killed, including its chief of staff.
Not all were killed where they worked.
Some were hit in their homes.
So how did Israel carry out such high-precision attacks?
Ronan Bergman is a journalist for the New York Times.
Paul Henley asked him about the sprawling intelligence operations behind Israel's offensive.
The need to identify online where 22 people all over Tehran, mainly Tehran region, at this specific moment and be able to target all of them
can only be the fruit of years of intelligence,
infiltration, and research.
Once you have such an intimate understanding
of the adversary, then usually people are looking
for a Mossad agent under every bed around every corner.
It's a mixture of all.
It's either a street camera or communication or phones or emails or well-located spies.
Also directing the collection into the specifics of someone's private life because many of the scientists were taken out, were
killed in their homes.
And the Israeli leaders of the intelligence and the defense establishment for many, many
years were convinced that later or sooner they will need to fight.
You've spoken on condition of anonymity, I know, to both Iranian and Israeli officials.
What else have you learned from them?
Both feeds of reporting to the New York Times, a story with our colleague Ben Hubbard, basically
corroborate the same information that the Iranians as well confirm the fact that drones be launched and guided from close range, what cultures were indeed launched.
And so the meaning of that, that Mossad commando teams were deployed on the ground
in Iran and that by itself means that this is not just operating or collecting
intelligence from afar.
It's not even spies that were recruited from that office or that neighborhood
that are only giving information, but it's also the ability to have teams of
commandos with explosives, with rifles, with ammunition and with a lot of gear
and sending drones in time of need everywhere.
If I understand correctly, that component of everything that Iran has gone through in
the last 48 hours is the main concern for the Iranian leaders because these platoons
were never caught and the Modus Operandi was never revealed and their existence on Iranian soil
just means further threat to other interests of the regime. Ronan Bergman, the war between Israel
and Iran has also dominated a telephone conversation between Donald Trump and Russia's President
Putin. Mediators say the latest round of talks between the US and Iran about its nuclear
program, which had been planned for Sunday, will not now take place. Tehran had said they
were meaningless because of what it described as American involvement in the wave of Israeli
attacks. Our chief international correspondent, Lise Doucet, has this assessment of the situation.
In his latest statement, Benjamin Netanyahu told Israelis the threat from Iran had been
in its 90th minute, that Israel had to act to prevent Tehran from building a nuclear
bomb. His critics say this was a war of choice, not necessity. That the talks which had been
expected to take place tomorrow between Iran and the US had offered a path to curb Iran's
nuclear enrichment. But the only focus now is on the escalating military operations.
Israel is continuing to hit nuclear facilities, missile sites and Iran's air defences. It
now says it has freedom of action in the skies over Tehran. More blistering attacks on the capital are certain to follow.
A former US negotiator on the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, Robert Malley,
spoke to the BBC about the risk of a dangerous escalation.
This is a very tumultuous time and there's a lot of uncertainty.
One day's victory can quickly turn sour. It's a powder keg and the
powder keg has already blown up. This may well last and it may go in even more dangerous directions.
Iran is also making it clear it will keep hitting back. Both sides are aiming for military targets
which lie in or close to residential areas. That creates the risk of a rising number of
civilian casualties. There's concern too about possible leakage as Israel targets nuclear facilities.
And there's no clear sense of Israel's endgame.
Mr Netanyahu talks about not just ending Iran's military threat,
but encourages Iranians to bring an end to their regime.
Still to come.
Because of the need for radio quiet, we've kind of frozen the community around 1990 technology.
The new film about the American town in West Virginia, where people go to avoid the electromagnetic radiation of modern life.
of modern life. from top rated dealers and advanced search tools, deal ratings and price history. So you know a great deal when you see one.
That's cargurus.ca.
Cargurus.ca.
He was a huge music star with millions of fans around the globe.
He was like a household name.
An international icon.
But his fame came at a cost.
The Indian singer and rapper Siddhu
Musaywala has been shot dead near his home in the North Indian state of Punjab.
I'm Ishleen Kaur and I spent the last two years searching for answers. Who
wanted Siddhu Musaywala dead and why? Siddhu Musaywala's murder can't be just an
open and shut case. World of Secrets, the killing call from the BBC World Service.
Listen now wherever you get your BBC podcasts.
An investigation is ongoing to understand what caused an Air India plane to crash
in the Indian city of Ahmedabad on Thursday.
The plane plummeted shortly after takeoff and hit a residential
area killing 241 passengers and more than 30 people on the ground. Air India's CEO says
it's now inspecting all of its Boeing 787 aircrafts and working to support the families of those who
have died. Our correspondent Arunudde Mukherjee is in Ahmedabad. There's been a lot of activity at the crash site.
From behind the barricades where we've been stopped, we've seen a steady stream of officials
arrive since this morning, driving in and out, trying to find material which may prove
to be crucial to the investigation.
Excavators have been busy clearing the debris and scanning the area as well.
India's civil aviation minister Ram Mohan Naidu Kinjarappu,
said the successful recovery of the black box
will help give them an in-depth understanding on the moments
before the crash.
The response teams were working on ground actively,
trying to rescue whatever is possible, cut down the fire,
and to move the debris so that the bodies can
be sent to the hospital at the earliest.
Beyond the technical investigating team, a committee set up to look into the incident
has been given three months to come up with their findings. Air India has been ordered
by the Civil Aviation authorities to carry out inspections of its existing Boeing 787
fleet before each aircraft can be cleared for their next flight.
They've cautioned passengers that some of these checks could result in delays and disruptions,
especially for long-haul flights.
Arunaday Mukherjee.
Dementia is the seventh biggest cause of death globally,
but there's still a lot that scientists don't understand about it.
The condition refers to an umbrella of symptoms that affect memory, thinking and the ability
to do daily activities.
There is currently no way to know if a person will have dementia in later life.
But now a new study from the University of Queensland has found that, in general, the
younger generations of today are less likely to develop it when they get
older than in the past. BBC health reporter Laura Foster has been speaking to Claudia
Hammond about the findings.
This study, they looked at 100,000 people in the UK, the USA and Europe who are aged
70 or over and they found that as expected people were more likely to have
dementia the older they were. That's very well known but they also found that
people born more recently are less likely to have dementia at any given age
than earlier generations and that this trend was more pronounced in women
particularly in the UK and Europe.
So what they're saying is when people get to the same age, I don't know, say 80,
fewer of those who were born later will have developed dementia.
Yeah, so if I was born in the 1930s I wasn't and you were born with whichever
decade you'd like to pick, that is after the 30s, I would be more at risk of dementia
than you would be.
And why should that be? Why should people from later generations be at less risk when they get older?
So frustratingly the study didn't look at that but that is the question I want to ask next.
They did kind of throw out a few theories though, and one hypothesis is that as the 20th century progressed
in the UK, the US and Europe where this study took place, women became better educated.
But there are plenty of reasons which could explain these trends.
You know, for instance, our changing attitudes to smoking, because, you know, it was so encouraged even
by doctors 60, 70, 80 years ago. Improvements in medicine across the board, which we've
talked about, improvements when it comes to diagnosing things like hearing loss and diabetes,
these known associated risks with dementia.
But this doesn't mean there'll be fewer people being diagnosed with dementia in
the future or less pressure on services and carers as well. No, sadly not. So although it is some good
news because the population is just set to grow and grow, the number of cases of dementia will keep
growing and of course dementia doesn't just affect the one person who has it, it affects the families, many of whom have to end up caring for the person.
And that puts pressure also on social care systems and society with people not being
able to work because they have to care and so on and so forth.
So although this is sort of good news, it's not a problem solved.
It's definitely not a problem fixed.
Laura Foster, in an earlier podcast, we brought you the story of North Korea's claim that
it had successfully relaunched a warship less than a month after it capsized during its
initial launch. The humiliating failed launch incents the country's leader Kim Jong-un
and now Pyongyang appears to have edited its top Navy commander out of official photographs.
This suggests he's being held responsible, as our Asia Pacific editor Mickey Bristo reports.
The destroyer tipped onto its side in a failed launch last month.
It was successfully relaunched this week, but the ramifications for those involved in the
accident continue.
The four-star general Kim Yong-sik was seen in pictures
published in March as the warship was being built, but had been airbrushed out of the
same photos when they were shown again on Friday. He was previously thought to be close
to the North Korean leader Kim Jong-un. He might now have been demoted or imprisoned.
North Korea hasn't said. Mickey Bristow. After decades of near-misses, South Africa's cricketers have finally managed to land one of the sport's major titles.
The team, which gained a reputation for stumbling with the finish line in sight, beat Australia by five wickets
in the final of the World Test Championships at the iconic Lord's Ground here in London on Saturday.
Addressing the crowd, Captain Temba Vabouma said it was an historic moment.
It's been a special couple of days. At some point it felt like we were back in South Africa
with all the support and the stands. We've prepared hard for this, we've worked hard
for this moment and for us as a country, you know, here's an opportunity
for us to, as divided as we are at times, to forget all of that and rejoice in this
moment and just be one.
You know, I'm sure the people back home will be celebrating it with us and you can trust
that we'll be celebrating it massively as well.
Among those celebrating is the South African sports broadcaster Mo Ali.
He spoke to Sportsworld's Lee James.
Wow, my heart is still pounding from the drama of this morning, especially when South Africa
lost that. We got a Timber Boomer early on and many were thinking, oh, here we go again,
that favourite tag of chokers coming along. And, you know, they've finally done it. Only
their second ICC trophy that they've won. They won the 1998 Champions
Trophy of course, but just over a year ago it was in heartache in the T20 final when
they narrowly lost by seven runs to India. And this is just a fantastic achievement.
And you know, particularly pertinent and significant for this country is that we are the rugby
world champions and now the cricket test world champions and both
captains Siya Kulisi and Timba Bavuma are black players. To people elsewhere in the world it might
not mean anything but given the history of this country of apartheid it's just a massive, massive
achievement. Yeah I think though that was one of the defining images for me. So many great moments
to see the celebrations at Lorde. So many of South Africa's fans were able to be there to be a part
of this very special day. But to see Timber Bavuma on the balcony, I think he was barely able to
watch. But as you say, the huge significance, the first black cricket to the captain South Africa
to bat so well through discomfort with his hamstring injury. But as you say, the significance then,
Mo, of that moment to be there as Siya Khaleesi was for his country.
Exactly.
And also, you know, Timbababuoma, you know, we've had great black bowlers throughout the
years.
We've had Makaia Antini, Naukakhi, Sohrabada.
But batting hasn't come through in this country in a big way.
You know, Timbababuoma scored his first hundred against England a few years ago, battled then.
He's been under the microscope all the time.
He was captain of the white ball team at one stage. He's had his critics all along. People are
saying, you know, he's a quota player, doesn't belong in the team. And he's just
shown so much character and resilience. And that was really born out when he was
batting virtually on one leg in the second innings in that terrific
partnership, that match-winning partnership with Aidan Markram when
they added 147 for the third wicket.
And that epitomizes who Timbababu Umayyiz and the fights that he's gone through in his
cricket career.
Mo Ali, finally to the Tribeca Film Festival currently underway in New York.
A new documentary there is getting lots of attention because it takes audiences inside
a community in the US which has been living in a pre-internet age.
The use of mobile phones and electronic devices there has been restricted
in case it interferes with a radio telescope in the town.
As Tom Brook reports, the filmmakers wanted to find out what impact this had on the inhabitants.
The world's largest steerable radio telescope can be found in Green Bank in West Virginia.
So the telescope can be used for sensitive scientific research and military intelligence.
Federally mandated restrictions have long been imposed to reduce electronic interference
with a near total ban on mobile phones by local residents.
And there are limitations on the use of Wi-Fi and microwave ovens.
If you're going to hide anything, you're going to hide it here.
The filmmakers follow a group of individuals who inhabit Green Bank.
Each has their own experience of what it's like to live in the Quiet Zone.
Filmmaker Mikhail Lepinsky.
In the documentary we see several characters.
We follow them in depth over several years, and we show different destinies
and how each of the personalities are affected
by living in this quiet zone.
Every time we go anywhere, they have more cell phones
than they did last time, more Wi-Fi than they had last time, you know.
Among the characters featured in the film is Clover Krieger, a poet.
She settled in this community because she suffers
from electromagnetic hypersensitivity, a debated medical condition.
Filmmaker Mikhail Lopinsky again.
She's allergic to electricity and radio waves.
So she has found a kind of safe haven there in Green Bank, but at the same time this means
that she has had to leave her husband abroad.
So she's forced into this confinement in a way.
With its exploration of a mobile phone-free community,
this film has an intriguing point of departure.
Although it may not deliver any earth-shattering conclusions,
the filmmakers hope because of the slow, non-frantic way
in which their film is shot, that it does convey the reality
of what life is like in a quiet community.
Filmmaker Caspar Bisgaard.
Hopefully the audience will get a cinematic experience that reminds them what silence
is.
That slowness provides a feeling too.
A feeling of reflectiveness, a feeling of connectiveness. We are deliberately telling in a cinematic and slow way
to get a feeling of going almost to go back in time.
Those seeking the silent, calm benefits of mobile phone-free Green Bank may be too late.
Wi-Fi and wireless devices have begun to infiltrate this quiet zone in West Virginia,
so it's now becoming noisy
by way of electronic interference, just like the rest of the world.
Tom Brook.
And that's all from us for now, but there will be a new edition of the Global News podcast
later.
If you want to comment on this podcast or the topics covered in it, you can send us
an email.
The address is globalpodcast.bbc.co.uk.
You can also find us on X at BBC World Service.
Use the hashtag globalnewspod.
This edition was mixed by Masood Ibrahim Kale and the producers were Alison Davis and Nikki
Varrico.
The editor is Karen Martin.
I'm Nigel Adderley.
Until next time, goodbye. No wonder. They have hundreds of thousands of cars from top-rated dealers and advanced search tools, deal ratings and price history. So you know a great deal when you see one.
That's cargurus.ca.