UK police say former minister Widdecombe's murder was a targeted attack


FILE PHOTO: A picture of former government minister and Reform UK member Ann Widdecombe is displayed at St. Pancras Church, in Widecombe-in-the-Moor, Britain, July 12, 2026. REUTERS/Jack Taylor/File Photo

LONDON, July 14 (Reuters) - ⁠British counter-terrorism police said on Tuesday that ⁠former government minister Ann Widdecombe, who was found ‌murdered at her home last week, was clearly targeted, adding that officers were still working to establish the motive.

"It is ​clear that this was a ⁠targeted attack. We are ⁠still working to understand the extent of any ⁠planning or ‌preparation and the motivation that sits behind that attack," Assistant Commissioner Laurence Taylor, ⁠head of Britain's counter terrorism policing, told ​reporters.

Local police ‌arrested a white British man late on Saturday ⁠on suspicion ​of her murder. Counter-terrorism officers, who took over the investigation on Monday, have since rearrested him on ⁠suspicion of commission, preparation or ​instigation of acts of terrorism.

Widdecombe, 78, who was a prominent member of Nigel Farage's populist Reform UK, was ⁠found dead at her home in rural southwest England last Thursday with what police described as "serious injuries". She stood down from parliament in 2010.

The ​case has raised further concerns ⁠about the security of politicians in the country after ​two serving British members of ‌parliament have been murdered in ​the last decade.

(Reporting by Sam Tobin; writing by Muvija M; editing by William James)

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