Tulip Siddiq faces calls to be extradited to Bangladesh after corruption probe - Bangladesh's opposition leader is seeking Tulip Siddiq's extradition following corruption allegations linked to her fam
Bangladesh’s opposition leader has said he would push for Tulip Siddiq to be extradited amid corruption allegations linked to her despot aunt’s regime...
Treasury minister Tulip Siddiq has resigned after growing pressure over an anti-corruption investigation in Bangladesh. She had referred herself to the prime minister's standards adviser, Sir Laurie Magnus, after questions about links to her aunt, who was ousted last year as Bangladesh's prime minister.
Treasury minister Tulip Siddiq has resigned, after growing pressure about allegations of corruption linked to her aunt, the deposed prime minister of Bangladesh.
Tulip is implicated in cases, including a multi-billion-pound embezzlement investigation related to a nuclear power plant deal with Russia, Bobby alleges
Former anti-corruption minister passed on concerns of ‘secret detention cells’ under her aunt’s regime to shadow minister
How would Sir Keir Starmer have reacted in opposition, had a Conservative government appointed as its anti-graft minister someone whose ties to a corrupt and brutal overseas regime were subject to intense scrutiny?
Sir Keir Starmer faced fresh calls from the Tories on Saturday to sack Ms Siddiq as a minister, as Bangladesh’s leader Muhammad Yunus called for an investigation into the properties to determine whether they were acquired through “plain robbery”.
The Labour MP for Hampstead and Highgate is facing an investigation in Bangladesh and resigned from her government job over links to her aunt.
Tulip Siddiq was also seen at the Kremlin in 2013 when Putin closed a £10 billion deal for Russian state-backed energy company Rosatom to build Bangladesh’s first nuclear power plant. Prior to her resignation, Sir Keir Starmer backed her to continue in ...
Independent adviser on ministerial standards says it is ‘regrettable’ Siddiq was ‘not more alert to the potential reputational risks’ of her close family’s association with Bangladesh
Sir Keir Starmer facing growing calls to sack his anti-corruption minister, who referred herself to standards watchdog last week