Two men have been jailed for conspiring to carry out arson attacks targeting property and a car connected to Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer.

Ukrainian national Roman Lavrynovych 22,  was jailed for seven years while Ukrainian-born Romanian national Stanislav Carpiuc, 27, was sentenced to two years imprisonment at the Old Bailey.

The pair were convicted at the Old Bailey on Monday, while a third man, Petro Pochynok, 35, was found not guilty of conspiracy to commit arson.

The attacks were carried out on behalf of Russia, the BBC has previously revealed.

It was May 2025 when a Toyota once owned by Sir Keir was set on fire in a street in north London.

Then days later two homes were set alight, including one rented out to the prime minister's sister-in-law, which he still owned.

Lavrynovych had carried out the attacks after being recruited by Russian-speaking Telegram user "El Money" who promised him payment.

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The defence team reverse course a day after saying they would argue he suffered "extreme emotional disturbance".

Villagers are furious at what they have called "wanton destruction" of the Cardiac Hill rails.

Community leaders say the actions of a murderer should not define their entire faith.

A dismembered body found in a chain-bound trunk in the Seine in 1995 was only recently connected to the defendant by DNA evidence.

The 61-year-old was found to have coerced his wife into sexual acts with men he found online in exchange for payment.