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Melania Trump gives eulogy at mother’s funeral

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Melania Trump's father Viktor Knavs, Melania Trump, Barron Trump, and Donald Trump at the funeral in Florida (BBC)

Donald Trump has joined his wife Melania in mourning her mother, Amalija Knavs, at a private funeral in Florida.

The former first lady announced the death of her mother at the age of 78 earlier this month. She delivered a eulogy at the funeral, remembering her mother as “a ray of light in the darkest of days”.

Mr Trump skipped a court session in his defamation trial in New York to attend the funeral, after the judge refused to postpone the proceedings for a day.

“In her presence, the world seemed to shimmer with radiance and joy,” Ms Trump said during a eulogy. “Our bond was unbreakable.”

Melania Trump leaves the funeral service for her mother, Amalija Knavs
The former first lady delivered a eulogy at the funeral (BBC)

Amalija Knavs and her husband, Viktor, became US citizens in 2018 after living in the US on green cards sponsored by their daughter. They were able to take advantage of the family reunification visa process that then-president Donald Trump had derided as “chain migration” that should be scrapped.

She had worked at a textile factory in the Slovenian town of Sevnica, while Viktor was a car salesman.

Mrs Trump attended high school in the capital, Ljubljana, about an hour’s drive away.

She met Donald Trump in 1998 while working as a model. They had a son, Barron, together in 2006 – the same year she became a US citizen.

Amalija and Viktor Knavs at the White in August 2020
Mrs Knavs once worked at a textile factory in the Slovenian town of Sevnica (BBC)
(BBC)


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Mother-in-law of Indian bride whose death set off media frenzy arrested

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Twisha Sharma was found dead in her marital home on 12 May [BBC]

India’s top anti-crime agency has arrested the mother-in-law of an Indian woman whose death has sparked conflicting claims of murder and suicide.

Twisha Sharma’s parents and siblings have alleged that she was tortured by her lawyer husband, Samarth Singh, and his mother – retired judge Giribala Singh – over dowry demands and that she was murdered, allegations they have denied.

The 33-year-old model and actor had been married for just five months when she was found dead in her matrimonial home in Madhya Pradesh state’s Bhopal city on 12 May.

On Thursday, the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) arrested Giribala Singh after questioning her for several hours.

The Madhya Pradesh High Court had earlier cancelled her anticipatory bail, finding that a trial court had ignored key evidence and witness testimony.

Following Twisha’s death, the police had registered a case of dowry death against the Singhs. Earlier this week, the investigation was taken over by the CBI.

Twisha’s death has made national headlines and has once against brought the issue of dowry deaths into the spotlight. Every year, thousands of women are murdered for bringing in insufficient dowries, even though the practice was banned in 1961.

The case has drawn significant attention because of the family’s prominence. Twisha was a former beauty pageant winner and actor, while her husband and mother-in-law were lawyers.

Twisha’s parents allege that dowry-related harassment began soon after her marriage to Singh. They also claim that when she became pregnant, Singh and his mother accused her of infidelity and forced her to terminate the pregnancy.

The Singhs deny the allegations, saying Twisha had mental health issues and took her own life. They also contend that the decision to terminate the pregnancy was hers.

Singh is currently in police custody. He had reportedly absconded after Twisha’s death and was arrested by police in Jabalpur on 22 May.

Twisha was cremated on Sunday after a second autopsy. Her family had alleged that the first post-mortem was flawed and accused the police of a cover-up, a charge the police denied.

[BBC]

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Survival before safety for Delhi’s poor as temperatures hit 45C

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Tuk tuk driver Mohammad Umar had to miss a day of work because he could not cope with the heat [BBC]

On a scorching afternoon in one of Delhi’s busiest markets, two different worlds exist side by side.

One is inside brightly-lit, air-conditioned showrooms, where customers move slowly between racks of clothes, escaping the worst of the summer heat.

The other is outside, under a blazing sun – where street vendors, fruit sellers, cycle-rickshaw drivers and ice-cream cart operators continue working through temperatures soaring above 40C.

In the afternoon, even walking through the market feels exhausting. But for millions of informal workers across Delhi, staying out of the heat isn’t an option.

Nearly 90% of India’s workforce is informal – most without contracts or job security, many dependent on outdoor work for daily wages.

Among them is 52-year-old Harish Chandra, who pedals a cycle-rickshaw through Delhi’s crowded streets until the heat becomes too much to bear.

At a public tap, he splashes water over his face before settling into a narrow strip of shade near the market.

“The body gives up,” he says.

Dressed in thin, worn cotton clothes, Chandra says Delhi’s summers have become harder to bear with each passing year.

“My day starts around nine in the morning, when the weather is still manageable. But by noon, it becomes difficult. The sun is so harsh that sometimes I feel my body giving up while I pedal,” he says.

“But if we stop, we don’t earn,” says Chandra. “And if we don’t earn, the family doesn’t eat.”

He recently sent his wife and three children back to their village in Bihar state. The temperatures there are equally high, he says, but open spaces and better ventilation make it easier to cope than Delhi’s cramped neighbourhoods and congested lanes.

For workers like Chandra, who spend most of their time outdoors, summer is no longer just a season, but an annual struggle for survival.

India’s heat season typically lasts from April until early July, before the monsoon brings relief. But climate scientists say extreme heat is becoming longer, harsher and more unpredictable as heatwaves across South Asia intensify under global warming.

Hindustan Times via Getty Images A woman wearing a beige Indian suit walks holding an umbrella on a sunny afternoon
People cover their heads with umbrellas or cotton scarves to avoid direct sunlight [BBC]

Dr Soumya Swaminathan, former chief scientist at the World Health Organization, told ANI news agency this week that temperatures now being recorded in India are approaching the limits of “human tolerability” and pose a “threat to both lives and livelihoods”.

Since mid-May, Delhi and surrounding areas have recorded daily temperatures above 40C, at times crossing 45C in the afternoon.

While some relief is expected over the weekend, heatwaves like these have become an increasingly familiar part of India’s summers.

Experts say cities like Delhi are especially vulnerable because of the “urban heat island effect”, where concrete, traffic and limited green cover trap heat and keep cities hotter than surrounding areas.

The weather office and Delhi government have also been issuing regular heat warnings.

On Wednesday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi posted on X urging people to stay hydrated, carry water outdoors and watch for signs of heat exhaustion, especially among children, the elderly and outdoor workers.

Delhi is also among cities with heat action plans.  It includes colour-coded heat alerts, public advisories urging people to avoid peak afternoon exposure, water kiosks and cooling centres.

But much of this advice is difficult to follow in practice. Even when temperatures rise, rent has to be paid and food has to be bought.

Mohammad Umar, 50, has been sitting inside his tuk-tuk near a busy traffic signal since morning, waiting for passengers.

He says he rarely takes a day off but last week, the heat finally forced him to stay home.

“My heart was racing and my body had no strength left. I must have bathed five times that day just to stay conscious,” he says.

But missing work comes with a cost.

“On a single day, I can lose 500-700 rupees (around $5-$7) if I don’t work. And we still have to pay for food and daily needs. That money comes out of our small savings,” he says.

A report by the International Labour Organization estimates heat stress could reduce India’s total working hours by 5.8% by 2030, with outdoor workers in agriculture and construction among the worst affected.

A Lancet Countdown report found India lost around 247 billion potential labour hours to heat in 2024, resulting in economic losses of $194bn.

Reuters A man sleeps in his cycle rickshaw outside a market area on a hot summer day in New Delhi, India April 29, 2026.
A man rests in his cycle rickshaw on a hot summer afternoon in Delhi [BBC]

Doctors say prolonged exposure to extreme heat puts immense strain on the body, especially for people spending long hours outdoors without shade, cooling or adequate hydration.

Dr Satish Koul, principal director and unit head of internal medicine at Fortis Hospital Gurgaon, says hospitals routinely see cases of dehydration, low blood pressure, kidney stress and heat exhaustion during extended heatwaves.

“Early warning signs people often ignore include dizziness, weakness, headache, nausea and confusion,” he says.

“If someone stops sweating, becomes disoriented or collapses, it can quickly become a medical emergency.”

But for many daily wage workers, escaping the heat is impossible even after work ends.

Much of Delhi’s informal migrant workforce lives in densely-packed settlements with unreliable electricity, poor ventilation and no air-conditioning.

Homes here are built from tin sheets and plastic which absorb heat through the day and release it slowly through the night.

Doctors warn that heat-related illnesses become especially dangerous when temperatures remain high overnight, preventing the body from properly recovering.

“When the body does not cool down properly during sleep, exhaustion keeps building day after day,” adds Dr Koul.

That exhaustion shapes daily life in these neighbourhoods, where most families depend on physically demanding work to survive.

Men leave early for outdoor jobs, while many women take up low-paying domestic work nearby. Alongside long hours of labour, many women also manage cooking, childcare and household chores in cramped homes with little relief from the heat.

Hindustan Times via Getty Images Visitors and commuters seek respite from summer heat inside a special cooling zone near the Jama Masjid Metro Station on May 11, 2026 in New Delhi, India.
Government initiatives often remain out of reach for daily wage workers who spend most of the day on the move [BBC]

Many try to keep cool by covering their heads, drinking salted water or adjusting work hours to avoid the harshest afternoon sun – but such measures offer only limited relief.

Sanjeeda, a 40-year-old widow who has spent years working in factories, small shops and private homes to raise her children, says in mid-May, she was bedridden for days with severe headaches and fever after heat exposure.

“The sun starts to feel harsh right from the morning,” she says. “By the time I reach the houses and start sweeping and mopping, my clothes are already soaked. Some days I also have to clean rooftops where the marble floors feel like they are on fire.”

Her employers occasionally offer water, lemonade or a place to sit in front of a fan.

“But no matter what the temperature is,” she says, “the work has to be done.”

[BBC]
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Villas, cars and cash: Italy seizes dead Mafia mobster’s millions

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Matteo Messina Denaro was arrested after decades on the run in 2023, and later died in jail [BBC]

Anti-mafia investigators in Italy have seized cash, companies and other assets worth more than €200m (£175m) in an operation they say targeted the network of notorious late Sicilian mafia boss Matteo Messina Denaro.

The funds, described as “huge amounts of capital” by the financial police in Palermo, are said to be proceeds from over four decades of drugs trafficking linked to the presumed former head of the Cosa Nostra group.

Announcing their results in Sicily on Thursday, investigators released a video showing masked police officers, some in riot gear, barging down doors and scaling walls to raid a series of vast luxury villas surrounded by palm tree-lined lawns.

Messina Denaro spent three decades on the run until his arrest in 2023 as he left a clinic where he was being treated for cancer. He died in custody soon after.

Whilst a fugitive, he had been sentenced to life for multiple murders including the assassination of two anti-mafia prosecutors in 1992 in bomb attacks several weeks apart.

Guardia di Finanza Police climb a ladder at a villa in an undisclosed location
Italy’s finance police released images of raids uncovering a “drugs trove” of villas, sports cars and cash [BBC]

He was also convicted of kidnapping and killing the 12-year-old son of a mafia man-turned-informer. After two years in captivity, the child was strangled and his body dissolved in acid so it could never be found.

Police say their latest investigation follows some of the Cosa Nostra money trail. It spanned multiple countries including Spain and Switzerland as well as the Cayman Islands.

Three people have been arrested and eight firms identified, including real estate companies said to be tied to the illicit funds.

The head of the National Anti-Mafia Prosecutor’s Office, Giovanni Melillo, called the operation “strategically significant”, not only because of the recovered cash.

“It also aims to prevent the reformation of a criminal organisation that existed until a few years ago,” he told a news conference.

“Seizing this wealth means continuing the disintegration process of the criminal group and the process of re-establishing structures capable of projecting the full intimidating power and economic and social influence of the Cosa Nostra on a global scale.”

Italy’s finance police say their operation began with a report from Andorra on an Italian woman with “significant financial resources”.

She turned out to be married to a drugs trafficker said to have close ties to the Cosa Nostra and to Messina Denaro himself.

The inquiry produced leads in several other countries.

In total, police say more than 150 officers were involved in a global operation which ranged from using drones and thermal scanners to search for hidden stashes of cash – to deploying IT experts to trace digital wallets and crypto currency.

Italian media are calling the haul “Denaro’s drugs trove” although the amount recovered is thought to be only a fraction of the vast wealth of his network which has since been reinvested all over the world.

Guardia di Finanza A grey sports car
Among the seized assets was this Porsche sports car [BBC]

[BBC]

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