Read the daily news to learn English

picture of article

Macron denies warning Ukraine about potential US betrayal – as it happened

The Guardian’s live coverage of the war in Ukraine is coming to a close. Here’s a round-up of today’s key events, including the results of a summit between Russia’s president Vladimir Putin and India’s prime minister Narendra Modi: French president Emmanuel Macron denied a report that he had said there was a risk Washington could betray Ukraine. He said that unity between Europe and the US was key in the support of Ukraine, adding there is “no mistrust”. “I deny everything,” Macron said, when asked about the report. “We need the United States for peace. The United States need us for this peace to be lasting and robust.” The US wants Europe to take over the majority of NATO’s conventional defence capabilities, from intelligence to missiles, by 2027, Pentagon officials told diplomats in Washington this week. The message was recounted by five sources to Reuters. Such a shift would dramatically change how the US, a founding member of the post-war alliance, works with its most important military partners. Russia’s defence ministry said that its forces captured the village of Bezimiane, in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk region. President Vladimir Putin earlier warned that Ukrainian troops must withdraw from Ukraine’s eastern Donbas region, which includes Donetsk, or Russia will seize it, rejecting any compromise over how to end the war in Ukraine. A Kremlin aide said Russia is encouraged by negotiations with the US over the Ukraine war and is ready for more talks. Russia and the United States were making progress in talks over a deal on Ukraine and Moscow was ready to continue working with the current US team, Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov said. Russian drones struck a house in central Ukraine, killing a 12-year-old boy, officials said. Drones struck Ukraine’s central Dnipropetrovsk region, destroying a house where the boy was killed and two women were injured. Ukraine’s military said that it had carried out long-range strikes overnight on an oil refinery in the Russian city of Syzran and the Temryuk port in the Krasnodar region. Syzran’s mayor Sergei Volodchenkov said Ukraine had targeted the city with drones without providing more detail. Also today: India and Russia signed multiple agreements following a summit between leaders Vladimir Putin and Norendra Modi. Putin said that Russia is ready to continue to provide uninterrupted fuel supplies for India. Russia and India will reshape their defence ties to take account of New Delhi’s push for self-reliance, the two countries said in a joint statement after the summit. Moscow has been India’s top arms supplier for decades and has said that it wants to import more Indian goods in an effort to grow trade to £75bn by 2030 that so far has been skewed in its favour due to New Delhi’s energy imports. Russi proposed that India localise the production of stealth fighter jets, the Sukhoi Su-57, on its territory, said Sergei Chemezov, CEO of the Russian state corporation Rostec, as quoted by the state news agency TASS, Reuters reports. India is the world’s top buyer of Russian arms and seaborne oil.

picture of article

German MPs rubberstamp military service plan amid school pupil protests

The German parliament has rubberstamped a new model for military service that aims to boost its armed forces as thousands of school pupils demonstrated across the country against the plans. The change will include the obligatory screening of all 18-year-old men to gauge their suitability to serve in the military from 1 January, but does not include conscription, as favoured by some conservative politicians. If the model fails to pull in enough recruits, parliament will be compelled to discuss the reintroduction of conscription, the defence minister, Boris Pistorius, told the Bundestag. Pupils missed classes to take part in climate protest-style “school strike” demonstrations against the legislation in 90 towns and cities, despite warnings from education authorities that striking could affect their end of year grades. Alicia, a 17-year-old taking part in a demonstration in Kreuzberg, Berlin, said: “I’m striking against conscription and in opposition to the rearmament that’s taking place, not least as I don’t think the government is doing enough to secure peace through diplomatic means.” MPs addressed concerns that young people’s futures were being put at risk amid pressure on anyone born from 2008 to join up. Siemtje Möller, of the SPD, a junior partner in coalition with the chancellor Friedrich Merz’s conservatives, pushed back against what she referred to as the “populist” message of the protest. She said: “We are neither deciding today that you will be obliged to serve in the armed forces, nor that we will be drawing lots to send you to Ukraine as cannon fodder. That is pure populism, or simply nonsense.” Möller expressed the sentiment building in recent weeks that a rise in interest in the German armed forces would ensure enough volunteers would be found to boost numbers to460,000, consisting of 260,000 active soldiers and 200,000 reservists. Germany currently has 182,000 active soldiers and just under 50,000 reservists. In 2011, under Angela Merkel’s government, Germany suspended its military conscription programme, which had been in place from 1956, in order to modernise it for the post-cold war world, where it was thought the focus would be on foreign missions requiring the skills of a professional army rather than conscripts needed to fight a war. Pistorius called the law “a critical step towards our ability to defend ourselves”, adding: “Our allies are looking to us.” The law was passed by 323 votes to 272, with one abstention. Among those against it were the far-right populist AfD and the far-left Die Linke. Desiree Backer, of Die Linke, urged young people to stand up against the law, which she said was “anything but voluntary”, as 18-year-olds would be obliged to fill out a questionnaire. She also pointed to evasive answers given by ministers when questioned over whether they would be prepared to see their own children conscripted. “Young people have other plans than risking their lives for the rich,” she said. The AfD’s Rüdiger Lucassen criticised as “superficial” attempts to attract young people to military service by giving them substantial pay increases and offering them benefits such as financing driving licences and language classes. “Soldiers who come for the pay have no solid foundation for their service,” he said, calling for a military service with a nationalist bent whereby young people would be driven by patriotism, not money, to serve. “The German soldier must know what he is fighting for,” he said, arguing that soldiers should follow the centuries-old tradition to “fight for their country, not for a government”. Critics called Lucassen’s stance problematic for failing to refer in that context to the atrocities committed by German soldiers during the Nazi era. The historic vote took place before another key piece of legislation regarding the German state pension, also expected to have a significant impact on the lives of young Germans. Merz had faced an unusual rebellion within his own party from 18 young MPs who argued that the law, which will keep state pensions at 48% of average wages until 2031, would come at the expense of young people who would bear the brunt of demographic changes that meant ever fewer workers were responsible for the pensions of their elders. The nail-biting vote was considered to be so tight that sick MPs and those with babies were persuaded to be present. In the end, the rebels were won round by a promise that a commission would draw up proposals for more far-reaching changes to the pension system from next year. The vote passed by 319 in favour to 225 against, with 53 abstentions. The law also includes tax incentives for people to continue in the workplace beyond retirement to cope with an acute labour shortage.

picture of article

Putin vows oil shipments to India will be ‘uninterrupted’ in defiance of US

Vladimir Putin has told the Indian prime minister, Narendra Modi, that Russia is ready to continue “uninterrupted” shipments of oil to India, signalling a defiant stance to the US as the two leaders met in Delhi and affirmed that their ties were “resilient to external pressure”. The statement, made on Friday after the annual India-Russia summit, appeared to be directed at western countries – particularly the US – that have attempted to pressure New Delhi into scaling back its ties to Moscow. The US president, Donald Trump, in August imposed an additional 25% import tariff on India over its purchase of cheap Russian oil, arguing it was undermining US sanctions and helping Putin bankroll the invasion of Ukraine. The punitive tariffs were met with anger in New Delhi and described by the Indian government as unreasonable and unjustified. India’s relationship with Russia goes back decades and is seen as one of the country’s most important defence and geopolitical alliances. In his statement, Putin made it clear that Russia did not intend to back down faced with US pressure over its energy cooperation with India. “Russia is a reliable supplier of energy resources and everything necessary for the development of India’s energy sector,” Putin said. “We are ready to continue ensuring the uninterrupted supply of fuel for the rapidly growing Indian economy.” Modi did not mention oil directly in his statement, but said that “energy security has been a strong and important pillar of the India-Russia partnership”. In a television interview before his meeting with Modi, Putin had challenged US interference in India’s purchase of Russian oil and said he intended to raise it with Trump. “If the US has the right to buy our [nuclear] fuel, why shouldn’t India have the same privilege?” he said. It was Putin’s first visit to India since his invasion of Ukraine and there was a visible attempt to demonstrate that the relationship between the two leaders had not been disturbed. Modi took the unusual step of greeting Putin directly off the plane and the two embraced each other warmly as old friends before they had a private dinner together on Thursday evening. In his statement, Modi described India’s partnership with Russia as “a guiding star” and said that “based on mutual respect and deep trust, these relations have always stood the test of time”. In the joint statement issued after their talks, both leaders emphasised “that in the current complex, tense, and uncertain geopolitical situation, Russian-Indian ties remain resilient to external pressure”. Before his arrival in Delhi, Putin had vowed to increase cooperation with India and China, in defiance of economic sanctions on Russia from the US and EU. Friday’s bilateral summit resulted in multiple agreements between the two countries in defence and economic cooperation. The two countries finalised an economic cooperation programme until 2030, which aims to double trade to $100bn a year by 2030. The two leaders also agreed to reshape their defence ties. Russia remains India’s biggest supplier of weapons, though this has diminished in recent years as Delhi has worked to diversify. Though no direct mention was made of India’s purchase of specific Russian defence systems, or Sukhoi Su-57 fighter aircraft, they agreed to the joint production of advanced defence platforms.

picture of article

‘No mistrust’ between Europe and US over Ukraine, Macron says

Emmanuel Macron has said there is “no mistrust” between Europe and the US, a day after a report claimed the French president had warned privately there was a risk Washington could betray Ukraine. “Unity between Americans and Europeans on the Ukrainian issue is essential. And I say it again and again, we need to work together,” Macron told reporters during a visit to China. “We welcome and support the peace efforts being made by the United States of America. The United States of America needs Europeans to lead these peace efforts.” The German magazine Der Spiegel on Thursday cited a leaked summary of confidential call between several European leaders in which Macron and the German chancellor, Friedrich Merz, voiced fundamental doubts about US efforts to negotiate between Ukraine and Russia. The transcript quoted Macron as warning Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, that “there is a chance that the US will betray Ukraine on territory, without clarity on security guarantees”. The alleged leak risked angering Donald Trump, whom European leaders have been at pains to flatter, knowing he is the key player in any mediation efforts with Moscow. It also came as European leaders rushed to salvage a sorely needed financing plan for cash-strapped Ukraine. Merz held emergency talks on Friday with the European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, and Belgium’s prime minister, Bart De Wever. When asked about the Spiegel report on Friday, Macron responded: “I deny everything.” Der Spiegel said it had obtained the English summary of Monday’s call, featuring what it said were direct quotations from heads of government. In the transcript, Macron described the current tense phase of the negotiations as harbouring “a big danger” for Zelenskyy. Merz reportedly added that he needed to be “very careful”. “They are playing games with both you and us,” Merz was reported as telling Zelenskyy – a remark believed to refer to a diplomatic mission to Moscow this week by Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff and the US president’s son-in-law Jared Kushner. Washington presented a 28-point proposal last month to halt the war in Ukraine, drafted without input from Ukraine’s European allies and criticised as too close a reflection of Moscow’s maximalist demands. US and Ukrainian negotiators have since held talks before Witkoff and Kushner headed to Moscow on Tuesday. The pair spent five hours in talks with Vladimir Putin at the Kremlin and Witkoff then met Ukraine’s national security council chief, Rustem Umerov, in Miami on Thursday. There was no official readout of the Miami meeting and a Ukrainian official said there were to be further talks in the Florida city on Friday. Moscow and Kyiv have continued to fight, seeking stronger negotiating positions. Russian drones struck a house in central Ukraine on Thursday night, killing a 12-year-old boy, officials said, while long-range Ukrainian strikes reportedly targeted a Russian port and oil refinery. Merz will dine in private on Friday with von der Leyen and De Wever, who has expressed opposition to a scheme to fund Ukraine that involves the unprecedented use of frozen Russian assets. With Russia’s attacks intensifying, Kyiv is running out of money. The EU has pledged to keep Ukraine afloat next year and intends to raise €90bn (£80bn) to meet about two-thirds of its needs for 2026 and 2027. Von der Leyen has proposed two main options to raise the funds. The bloc could either borrow against its shared budget on the international markets, she said this week, or issue a loan secured by immobilised Russian assets – mainly held in Belgium – that Kyiv would repay from Russia’s postwar reparations. De Wever, however, told an event in Brussels this week that he was against seizing frozen Russian assets. It was “a nice idea, stealing from the bad guy to give to the good guy”, he said. “But stealing the frozen assets of another country has never been done. “Even during the second world war, we did not confiscate Germany’s money.” In an op-ed in the Frankfurter Allgemeine newspaper on Thursday, Merz told his fellow EU leaders that the decisions they made over the coming days would “decide the question of European independence”.

picture of article

Edinburgh airport resumes flights after services suspended due to IT problem

Flights have resumed at Edinburgh airport after it suspended operations on Friday morning because of an IT issue in air traffic control. Planes were beginning to take off at about 10.40am, according to a statement posted by the airport on social media. Some planes had waited for about two hours to depart, and some disruption and delays were expected to persist. Inbound flights had been diverted. A spokesperson for the airport said: “Flights at Edinburgh airport have now resumed following the IT issue with ANS (Air Navigation Solutions), our air traffic control provider. “We thank passengers for their patience and understanding.” Passengers were earlier advised to contact airlines for information on flights as the airport and its service provider worked to resolve the problem. Those waiting in the terminal were left unsure for about an hour after the suspension was announced, before news came that operations could resume. EasyJet, British Airways and Ryanair flights were among the airlines caught up in the disruption, with a number of afternoon flights subsequently cancelled and others subject to severe delays. Transatlantic flights operated by Delta and United Airlines were also affected, including an incoming Delta flight from New York that was diverted to Dublin. Among the passengers affected was a mother from Swindon, who said the delays to her flights would mean she would miss her youngest child’s last nativity play. The woman, identified only as Felicity, told the BBC she had travelled up to Edinburgh for a work meeting, and said: “My youngest is in her last nativity and due to the delays I can’t make it home on time.” More than 15 million passengers a year – an average of 43,000 a day – fly in and out of Edinburgh, making it Scotland’s biggest airport, with flights to 155 destinations. Air traffic control issues – and IT failures – have become one of aviation’s most recurrent problems. Edinburgh airport also closed because of a global IT problem with CrowdStrike last July. Edinburgh’s air traffic control services are provided by ANS, which blamed a “technical issue” for the outage. A spokesperson said: “Safety is our number one priority, and our engineers worked at pace to restore system capability as quickly as possible. “We regret the inconvenience that this is causing and thank everyone for their patience.” Nats, which manages most of the UK’s airspace, and has suffered its own high-profile meltdowns, said during the outage it would “work closely with the airlines impacted and support as best we can”. The problem on Friday was understood to be unrelated to the Cloudflare outage that affected websites around the world including Transport for London and Zoom.

picture of article

Flights resume at Edinburgh airport after air traffic control issue – as it happened

Now that services are resuming we will be closing this blog shortly. You can read our report here

picture of article

Friday briefing: After ​constant leak​s and ​a resignation​, is the OBR ​still ​fit for ​purpose?

Good morning. The Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) was designed to be an institution that crunches numbers quietly in the background. Instead, over the past week, it has found itself dragged kicking and screaming into the political spotlight. On the day attention should have been fixed on Rachel Reeves’s economic plans, many instead watched the fallout from the OBR’s accidental early publication of her budget. After the leak there followed days of anger and disbelief, which culminated in the resignation of the OBR’s chair, Richard Hughes. This uproar followed months of briefings and separate leaks about the OBR in the run up to the budget, painting a picture that the forecasts were fluctuating wildly, and the treasury was trying to respond to these swings, making the budget process far more chaotic. The OBR’s David Miles later told MPs that these briefings were not only wrong, but the volume and inaccuracy of these leaks were so serious the watchdog feared for its reputation. Now, as the search begins for a new figure to lead one of the most powerful and thankless institutions in British economic life, a sharper question is being asked, largely from the left. Is the OBR still fit for purpose, or has this episode exposed a case for abolishing it altogether? To explore the case for and against, I spoke to Heather Stewart, the Guardian’s economics editor. That’s after the headlines: Five big stories UK news | Vladimir Putin is “morally responsible” for Dawn Sturgess’s novichok death, an inquiry has found. Sturgess died after spraying herself with a nerve agent smuggled into the UK by Russian agents. UK politics | A group of Holocaust survivors have demanded Nigel Farage tell the truth and apologise for the antisemitic comments that fellow pupils of Dulwich College allege he made toward Jewish pupils, as the Reform leader turned on broadcasters for questioning him about the growing scandal. Eurovision | Ireland, Spain, Slovenia and the Netherlands will boycott next year’s Eurovision after Israel was given the all-clear to compete in the 2026 song contest despite calls by several participating broadcasters for its exclusion over the war in Gaza. UK politics | Lord Evans of Watford, suspended by the House of Lords for breaking lobbying rules after a Guardian investigation, is now facing claims that he received at least $1m (£760,000) in an allegedly corrupt deal. US news | The New York Times is suing the US defense department and the defense secretary, Pete Hegseth. The lawsuit argues restrictions imposed by the Trump administration violate free speech protections. In depth: ‘Even in normal times, economic forecasts are just not very accurate’ The OBR was first created as a public body in 2010 by the Conservative and Liberal Democrat coalition government, in the aftermath of the global financial crash. It was a time when Britain’s public finances were under intense scrutiny (remember that infamous ‘there’s no money left’ note?). The then chancellor, George Osborne, made a political case that former prime minister Gordon Brown had wrecked the UK economy by spending too much money. Many were persuaded. But, Heather Stewart argues, it was politically expedient for the coalition government to lay the blame for Britain’s economic problems solely at Labour’s door, while sidelining the central role of the global financial crash. This argument was necessary to justify the tough medicine being offered by the coalition government: austerity. Part of the Conservatives’ case was that Gordon Brown had massaged the figures during his time in office, producing optimistic forecasts that dressed up the state of the economy, Heather explains. To prevent this happening again, Osborne announced that the forecasts underpinning each budget would be handed to an independent organisation. “There’s a funny dance between the Treasury and the OBR because the Treasury can only publish a budget if the OBR says the sums add up,” Heather says. “So if the Treasury says ‘we might do this’, the OBR might say ‘that’ll bring in this amount, but it might slow growth’; it has this effect and you go back to the drawing board. So, it’s an external watchdog, but it works very closely with the Treasury.” *** How accurate are these forecasts? The OBR is obliged by law to publish two forecasts a year. These are notorious for their inaccuracy but, as Heather tells me, that is not necessarily the OBR’s fault. She pointed to the succession of economic shocks no one saw coming after the coalition years: Brexit, Covid, and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which sent energy prices soaring. “Even in normal times, economic forecasts are just not very accurate. So it’s not that the OBR is particularly rubbish, it’s just that it’s really difficult forecasting the economy,” Heather says. Can the chancellor simply ignore these forecasts? In theory, yes, but politically, it is far more complicated. Heather pointed to this year’s spring statement, when the OBR told Rachel Reeves she would fail to meet her fiscal rules in five years’ time. Technically, Reeves did not have to respond immediately. “But she felt she had to respond to it, she had to show she was going to meet the rules and in fact implemented welfare cuts that then infuriated Labour MPs and had to be reversed,” Heather says. So why doesn’t Reeves just ignore the OBR? Heather says two forces currently restrain the chancellor from doing so: the country’s high national debt and high borrowing costs, the latter of which is determined by the bond markets. “Reeves will have felt that if she ignored the OBR, that might cause a sell off in the bond market and that would make borrowing costs go up. That would be reminiscent of the Liz Truss period, who decried the OBR as part of the establishment plot holding back growth and tax cuts. Truss did her mini budget without a forecast from the OBR and we remember how that ended,” Heather says. Labour MP Andy MacNae has called for the OBR to produce just one forecast a year, likening its predictions to weather forecasts. While the watchdog has resisted this idea, and doing so would require a change in the law, Heather explains Reeves will implement some small, yet notable changes. The OBR will still publish two forecasts a year, but from next spring Reeves has said its assessment will no longer be used to judge her against her fiscal rules. Instead, it will set out what the budget balance is expected to be over a set period, without issuing a formal pass-or-fail verdict. *** Is the OBR right wing? There is also criticism that the OBR is too conservative in its forecasts. “There are left-wing economists who say it was basically set up by Osborne to rubber stamp austerity,” Heather says. One of the most prominent critiques comes from the New Economics Foundation, which argues the watchdog does not give sufficient weight to the benefits of public investment. The group says the OBR relies too heavily on the idea of “crowding out”; the assumption that increased public spending causes the private sector to retreat, Heather explains. The New Economics Foundation has also warned that the current system “privileges the OBR with a power that has received little democratic scrutiny”. The organisation has called for forecasting to be taken back into the Treasury, with an external Office for Fiscal Transparency acting more as a quality check and the chancellor making the final decision. Labour MP Jeevun Sandher, who is an economist, has gone further, arguing that the OBR is stuck in a ‘doom loop’ because of its central assumption that public spending cuts do not significantly reduce growth. “There is definitely a worry that the OBR doesn’t give enough credit to public spending and the impact that’s likely to have. Having said that, they’ve just had to revise their forecast because they’ve been systematically too optimistic about productivity, which is one of the big determinants of growth,” Heather says. *** Should the OBR be abolished? The Labour government is keen to project the idea that its economic decisions are grounded in people’s lives, not just the numbers. That message rang hollow, however, after the turmoil that followed the spring statement. Heather recalls an interview she did with Liz Kendall, then serving as pensions secretary, who was adamant that impending welfare cuts were based on wanting to help people, rather than to meet targets. “But it was really clear they had started from a spreadsheet and it was basically an OBR spreadsheet,” Heather adds. “The focus was on how do we meet this target; which package of reforms could we do? And that is a really, really bad way to make policy.” Still, Heather warns there would be consequences of scrapping the OBR, on the admittedly dull but immensely powerful bond markets. “We’ve got to look credible to these investors. If you say we’re going to scrap this institution that checks our homework, I would say it’s not sending a great signal at this particular point in time.” She also questions whether abolition would be as revolutionary as it sounds. “They are only economic forecasters,” she says. What often goes unspoken, says Heather, is that chancellors set their own fiscal rules in the first place. While much has been written about how tightly Reeves has constrained herself with hers, in the end the decision to change them still rests with her – as does when to heed a forecast, and when to hold course. What else we’ve been reading This piece by Anna Moore, on a small group of women who fought to criminalise intimate image abuse and won, in what was a massive victory for victims, is a beacon of light in the otherwise grim world of deepfake porn. Karen Your Party’s founding conference was as acrimonious and chaotic as its launch, but is all hope lost? Andy Beckett argues they may have not yet squandered this historic opening for a socialist force in parliament. Aamna Esther Addley explores the English neighbourhoods still grappling with the fraught and highly divisive practice of both raising and removing flags, that one resident likened to “a mini battle of Cable street”. Karen Much has been written about the AI boom, and much of it incredibly boring, but this feature by the Guardian’s Dara Kerr on the new gold rush in the form of datacentres in the American West is a gripping and terrifying read. Aamna While the consumption of ultra-processed foods is particularly high in the West, the ubiquity of these harmful foods is global. So too is the battle by parents to keep their children away from them. Karen Sport Football | Aitana Bonmatí has been voted the best female football player on the planet by our panel of 127 experts, ahead of Mariona Caldentey and Alessia Russo. Formula One | Lando Norris says he would not want McLaren to have to use team orders to aid him in winning his first world championship at the season finale in Abu Dhabi this weekend. Football | Ahead of tomorrow’s draw for the World Cup 2026 we analyse the worst-case scenarios for England, Scotland, USA and Australia. Something for the weekend Our critics’ roundup of the best things to watch, read, play and listen to right now Music Dove Ellis: Blizzard | ★★★★★ With shades of Jeff and Tim Buckley, Galway-born indie engima Ellis writes tunes so strong they feel like old friends. On his glorious debut album, which arrives with no biographical notes, Ellis’s remarkable vocals can settle into a dreamy falsetto so fragile he could be dancing on a pin, and then suddenly perform a handbrake turn into intensity, even anger. The way the arrangements (including saxophone and drums) dart around his voice in ornate little counter-melodies recalls fellow Irishman Van Morrison, and recent single To the Sandals noticeably nods to Joan Armatrading’s Love and Affection. The 22-year-old’s lyrics frequently seem to flutter between hope and despair, before building to a purifying conclusion. Dave Simpson TV What’s the Monarchy for?: David Dimbleby | ★★★★☆ Dimbleby’s demolition of the royals is hugely entertaining. The opening episode cleaves closest to the titular question – parts two and three are more like “Is the Monarchy a Giant Ponzi Scheme?” and “Are the Monarchy Personally Repellent?”, respectively – examining the power the monarchy has and how it wields it. Much of the hour is spent trying to ascertain whether King Charles influences government policy by advocating for his own beliefs. He certainly has the ear of politicians: the prime minister takes weekly trips to Buckingham Palace, while nobody interviewed denies that the king’s letters are routinely placed at the top of the relevant minister’s pile. Dimbleby ably drives a cart and horses through sophistry from Dominic Grieve, who during his time as attorney general refused a freedom of information request from the Guardian to publish Charles’s letters. Jack Seale Film It Was Just An Accident: Jafar Panahi | ★★★★☆ Jafar Panahi, the veteran Iranian auteur and democracy campaigner, who continues to be arrested and imprisoned and to defy the law, finding loopholes so his movies can be made and shown abroad, brings us a story of state violence and revenge. A man driving at night with his heavily pregnant wife and young daughter hits a dog with his car. What follows is a grotesque, almost dreamlike sequence of scenes in various locations, including a remote desert with a tree that local hothead Hamid says looks like a stage-set for Waiting for Godot. The plot twists and turns are startling, almost unreal; can it be true that normal people like this can countenance violence? But if that seems implausible, perhaps that is because we don’t grasp the violence through which they have already lived. Peter Bradshaw Art Saodat Ismailova: As We Fade | ★★★★★ Be prepared to have your heart stop on entering Ismailova’s first solo show at Baltic, Gateshead. The Uzbek artist and film-maker has created an exhilarating, terrifying and unforgettable show. The room is dark. Four works are arranged around a padded black square in the centre for sitting or lying on – a reference to the void, something Ismailova has been fascinated with for two decades. She grew up during perestroika, a period of widespread political, social and economic reform in the late 1980s, when Soviet ideology began to collapse leaving a void in the culture. The four works sing to each other; they crackle, scream and collide. It is elemental – images of fire, ice and cascading currents of water recur, while you can almost feel the sand whipping the back of your neck as you listen to the desert wind. Charlotte Jansen The front pages The Guardian leads with “Farage hits out as fresh claims of ‘vindictive’ teenage racism emerge”. The Mail goes with “Farage’s ‘It Ain’t Half Hot Mum’ attack on BBC double standards”. The Financial Times reports “Expat entrepreneur’s record £9mn gift thrusts Reform into fundraising lead”. The i quotes Liz Kendall with “‘Ignorant’ to call Labour the party of welfare, claims Cabinet minister”. The Telegraph leads with “Lammy breaks ranks on Brexit”. The Times reports “Deal to give frozen £8bn from Russia to Ukraine”. The Mirror looks into an inquiry into the 2018 Salisbury poisonings with “Dawn’s blood on his hands”. Finally the Sun leads with comments from a former MasterChef judge: “John Torode: I’m in therapy over TV axe”. Today in Focus The World Cup’s Maga makeover Guardian sportswriter Jonathan Liew on how football went about courting Donald Trump – and how it might regret it when the World Cup comes to the US next summer. Cartoon of the day | Ben Jennings The Upside A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad He was the first scientist to dive at the north pole, has taken a Prince and prime minister under icy Arctic waters and helped to locate the wreck of the Titanic. At 88, the famed undersea explorer, Dr Joe MacInnis, once described as a “rip roaring, life loving” young Canadian, has decades of adventures to share: the time he and a Russian explorer, Anatoly Sagalevich, were trapped two and a half miles below the surface by a wayward telephone wire from the Titanic, or when he was part of the team that first filmed narwhal, bowhead and beluga whales underwater. Now the physician says that working alongside pioneers like Jacques Cousteau and Robert Ballard, looking to push the limits of human possibility, has given him a relentless optimism and hope. Sign up here for a weekly roundup of The Upside, sent to you every Sunday Bored at work? And finally, the Guardian’s puzzles are here to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until tomorrow. Quick crossword Cryptic crossword Wordiply

picture of article

EU leaders race to save Ukraine funding deal as Kyiv’s cash runs low

Germany’s chancellor, Friedrich Merz, will meet the European Commission chief, Ursula von der Leyen, and Belgium’s prime minister, Bart De Wever, for emergency talks on Friday as the EU races to save its sorely needed financing plan for Ukraine. The three leaders will dine in private in Brussels, a German government spokesperson said on Thursday, as Belgian officials continued to express strong opposition to the scheme, which involves the unprecedented use of frozen Russian assets. With Russia’s attacks intensifying, Washington pushing for a peace deal that favours Moscow and Kyiv fast running out of money and Europe struggling for influence at US-led talks, the bloc must find a solution or suffer a major blow to its credibility. Two weeks before a crucial 18 December EU summit, von der Leyen on Wednesday proposed two main options for the EU to raise the tens of billions of euros Ukraine needs to keep funding its struggling military and basic services against Russia’s war. The EU has pledged to keep Ukraine afloat next year. It aims to raise €90bn (£80bn) to meet about two-thirds of Kyiv’s needs for 2026 and 2027, von der Leyen said, giving Ukraine the means to negotiate a peace deal “from a position of strength”. The bloc could either borrow against its shared budget on the international markets, the commission president said, or issue a loan secured by immobilised Russian assets – mainly held in Belgium – that Kyiv would repay from Russia’s postwar reparations. There are, however, obstacles to both alternatives. Many member states are not keen on common borrowing, which would have to be repaid. It would also need unanimity, which may prove difficult given Hungary’s past opposition to funding for Ukraine. The frozen assets plan, floated almost two months ago, continues to be fiercely rejected by Belgium, which hosts about two-thirds of the estimated €290bn of Russian assets held in the west at Euroclear, a securities depository in Brussels. “This is quite a big moment,” a diplomat from a founding member state said. “It’s never easy to reach agreement at 27, we know that. But if we can’t do something as existential as funds for Ukraine, we’ll really have failed – both us, and Ukraine.” The logic of using the assets as security for a huge loan to Ukraine – not confiscating them, which most experts agree would be illegal – is that it would show Moscow that Ukraine could keep fighting for years, putting Kyiv in a better negotiating position. But De Wever’s government has repeatedly argued that should Russia decide to launch retaliatory legal action, or demand its money back because the sanctions against it have been lifted, it risks being left on the hook for billions, alone. “We have the frustrating feeling of not having been heard. The texts the commission tabled do not address our concerns in a satisfactory manner,” Belgium’s foreign minister, Maxime Prévot, said on Wednesday, calling for joint EU borrowing instead. De Wever, a Flemish nationalist, has gone further. The Belgian prime minister told an event in Brussels this week it was “a nice idea, stealing from the bad guy to give to the good guy. But stealing the frozen assets of another country has never been done.” He added: “Even during the second world war, we did not confiscate Germany’s money. In a war, you freeze sovereign assets. And at the end, the losing side must give up all or part of those assets to compensate the victors.” But, De Wever claimed, it was “a fairytale, a complete illusion” to “imagine that Russia will lose this war in Ukraine”. Moscow had “let us know that if the assets are seized, Belgium, and me personally, will feel the effects for eternity”. The commission has insisted the plan complies fully with EU and international law and a “three-tier defence” would shield Belgium from legal jeopardy, an argument von der Leyen and Merz are likely to advance at Friday evening’s dinner. In an op-ed in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung newspaper on Thursday, the German chancellor warned his fellow EU leaders that the decisions they made over the coming days would “decide the question of European independence”. An “imperialist Russia” was “striving to extend its sphere of influence into the states of Europe” and “preparing militarily for a conflict with the west”, Merz said, adding that it was vital to “send an unambiguous signal to Moscow” by using the assets. He said Belgium should be given assurances the risks of the plan would be borne fairly by all EU member states, with each country “incurring an equal share of the risk, as a function of their respective economic performance”. Europe must “decide and shape what happens on our continent”, he added. “The financial resources of an aggressor have been lawfully frozen within the jurisdiction of our constitutional state. What we decide now will determine the future of Europe.”