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Zelenskyy and Polish PM hail EU’s €90bn loan: ‘Scariest thing for Russians is when we’re together’ – live

The US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, has been answering questions from journalists in the last half hour, and he was asked about the latest on Ukraine. He said the US administration invested “a tremendous amount of time and energy” in ending this war, and is “trying to figure out what can Ukraine live with and what can Russia live with.” “[We want to] sort of identify what both sides positions are and see if we can sort of drive them towards each other to some agreement,” he said. “A negotiated settlement requires two things, both sides to get something out of it, and both sides to give something. And we’re trying to figure out, what can Russia give and what do they expect to get? What can Ukraine give and what can Ukraine expect to get? In the end, the decision will be up to Ukraine, and up to Russia will not be up to the United States.” He added that “this is not about imposing a deal on anybody,” but trying to find where interests can “overlap.” “I think we’ve made progress, but we have ways to go, and obviously the hardest issues are always the last issues.”

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Circle back in February? If only we could | Letter

I’m curious about these New Zealand workers checking out of any serious work from Christmas until March (See you in March? Debate in New Zealand over extremely long summer break, 12 December). Who are these workers exactly? Retail workers? No, they’re straight back on deck for Boxing Day sales. Supermarket workers? Certainly not. Hospital staff? Fast-food workers? Bar and cafe workers? I think not. Minimum-wage workers need not apply for this extended break. I suspect the article reflects the experience of “professional” types: company directors, academics and politicians. Meanwhile, unseen people are working their behinds off emptying your bins and selling you beer for atrocious wages. They’re certainly not asking you to “circle back [in] February”. David Parker Auckland, New Zealand • Have an opinion on anything you’ve read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.

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At least four people killed in mass stabbing in Taipei

At least four people have died in a rare mass stabbing incident in central Taipei after an attacker used smoke grenades to cause chaos as he went on a violent rampage through Taiwan’s capital. Several people were also injured. The suspected assailant is among the dead after he fell from a building during a police chase through a busy shopping district on Friday evening. One of the victims was killed as they tried to stop the attack inside Taipei’s Main station, according to the city’s mayor, Chiang Wan-an. The suspected attacker has been described as a 27-year-old man from Taoyuan, a northern county in Taiwan. He was reportedly an air force volunteer soldier who had served near Taipei’s Songshan airport in a radio communication team but was discharged in 2022. Taiwan’s premier, Cho Jung-tai, told reporters that the suspected attacker had a prior criminal record and outstanding warrants. Local media reported he was wanted by the local prosecutor’s office for obstructing military service in 2024 due to his failure to report on duty. Cho described the incident as a “deliberate attack”, although by late Friday night the motive remained unknown. Taiwan’s president, Lai Ching-te, said in a statement there would be heightened security across the country and that there would be “no leniency”. The attack started at Taipei Main station on Friday afternoon. The attacker allegedly threw smoke grenades inside the station at the peak of rush hour, before making his way to nearby Zhongshan. One video filmed by a bystander showed the young man in the middle of the main road outside Zhongshan subway station, a popular late-night and shopping district. He was wearing a black T-shirt and shorts, sneakers, a mask and some protective equipment. He appeared to have other weapons including at least one other knife strapped to his chest. The video shows him pulling smoke grenades from a bag on the ground and casually throwing them towards crowds gathered on the sidewalk, keeping their distance. He is then seen running across the road and into a shopping mall, randomly slashing at people with a long knife as he runs. Another clip shows him inside what appears to be Taipei Main station, pulling smoke grenades from a wheeled suitcase and calmly throwing them. Other clips show one of the underground stations filled with smoke, and people being evacuated out of buildings. “The scene was terrifying and smelled awful,” said one resident, who posted videos to social media. Two men who were working in a nearby fast food chain told local media they heard screaming from outside and could smell the smoke. One said people started running into the restaurant asking if they could hide inside , adding that they all took shelter behind the cashier. Violent crime is relatively rare in Taiwan, but in the last couple of years a number of stabbing attacks on the metro have raised fears. Some trains now carry instructional videos on how people can disarm attackers with umbrellas and fire extinguishers. In 2014, a college student killed four people and injured more than 20 in a stabbing spree on the Taipei metro. The student was executed for the killings in 2016. Last year, on the 10-year anniversary of the 2014 incident, three people were injured in a mass stabbing incident in Taichung, Taiwan’s second largest city. Photos published by local media revealed a burned-out bag full of what appeared to be unused molotov cocktails. The smoke grenades pictured are replica US military equipment and advertised for sale online in Taiwan, but did not appear to be available on the website when the Guardian checked after the attack. An affiliated store on a separate shopping platform was taken down on Friday night. One prominent seller of the equipment told the Guardian they had checked their sales records after the incident and were not aware of any high volume or unusual sales that suggested the attacker had bought the grenades from them. They said the items were “intended for lawful uses such as outdoor activities, training or signalling, and not for violent purposes”. Additional research by Lillian Yang

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‘Radiator rattling’ earthquake hits Lancashire village for second time in two weeks

A village in Lancashire has been hit by a “radiator rattling” earthquake for the second time in little over two weeks. Residents of Silverdale, a small coastal village located five miles south of the Cumbria border, reported the now strangely familiar feeling of rattling and shaking in their homes at 5.03am as a 2.5-magnitude earthquake hit the area with its epicentre 1.6 miles (2.6km) off the coast. The village and its surrounding areas had previously been struck by a 3.3-magnitude earthquake on 3 December, which had been the strongest earthquake in England since another magnitude 3.3 event in Staffordshire in 2023. There have been no reports of injuries or damage to property. The British Geological Survey (BGS) has said that the more recent earthquake was an aftershock from the quake felt earlier in the month and that it was “not unusual” for tremors such as these to come in the weeks or months after bigger earthquakes. People in the Morecambe Bay area have described the quake with different levels of severity, with some saying there was “a quick sharp shaking jolt” and that it “made a thunder noise”, and others posting that it made a “a huge bang” and there was “a loud boom and the bedroom window shook” and “the radiators and pictures rattled”. Online, one resident posted: “Woke me up. Sounded like a short rumbling in the distance, like it happened a few streets away. Only lasted a couple of seconds. Nothing like the intensity of the previous one. I didn’t feel the need to check for damage, but because of the last one, I definitely knew it was an earthquake.” Earthquakes in Britain are far rarer than many parts of the world, and of the between 200 and 300 the country experiences every year, only 10% of them are strong enough to be felt or noticed without specialist equipment.

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Ukraine attacks Russian ‘shadow’ tanker off Libyan coast

Ukraine says it has attacked a Russian “shadow fleet” tanker with aerial drones 1,250 miles (2,000km) from its borders, in the first such strike in the Mediterranean Sea since Moscow’s full-scale invasion nearly four years ago. Friday’s strike off the coast of Libya, which reportedly caused critical damage, took place on the day of Vladimir Putin’s annual end of year press conference in which he said Russia would respond to recent Ukrainian attacks on shadow fleet tankers. It came amid an escalating maritime conflict over the shadow fleet, a term used to describe vessels used by Russia, Iran and Venezuela to evade sanctions with deceptive practices. Kyiv has previously targeted Russian shadow tankers in the Black Sea as it has sought to interdict an important source of revenue that is being used to finance Moscow’s illegal invasion. Estimated to comprise more than 1,000 ships, which frequently change their flags and whose ownership is unclear, the fleet has enabled Moscow to keep exporting its crude oil for much-needed revenue despite the curbs. Experts and several European leaders believe some vessels have been used by Russia to conduct hybrid warfare across the continent. Commenting on the latest attack, Putin on Friday said Russia would “definitely respond” to Ukraine’s attacks on its so-called shadow fleet. “Ultimately, this will not lead to the expected result,” he said. “It will not disrupt any supplies, but will only create additional threats,” he said, without directly commenting on the latest attack in the Mediterranean. The Russian leader has previously threatened to sever Ukraine’s access to the Black Sea in response to the attacks on tankers, which he has derided as piracy. He was speaking during his annual call-in show with the nation, a carefully choreographed event that has become a fixture of Russia’s political calendar. The marathon broadcast, which lasted more than four hours, allows journalists and hand-picked members of the public to put questions directly to the president, projecting an image of openness while the agenda remains tightly controlled. A source in the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) said Friday’s attack was a “new, unprecedented special operation”. However, they did not give further details of the attack, including how the SBU deployed a drone in the Mediterranean, from where it was launched, or which countries the drones could have flown over. The source said the cargo ship was empty at the time and no environmental threat resulted from the operation. The Ukrainian official did not say how the drones reached the ship, but said the operation involved “multi-stage” measures. They claimed the tanker, identified as the Qendil, had “sustained critical damage and cannot be used for its intended purpose”. The tanker was being used to circumvent western sanctions and fund Russia’s war chest, they claimed, making it “an absolutely legitimate target”. “The enemy must understand that Ukraine will not stop, and will strike them anywhere in the world, wherever they may be,” the source added. The British maritime risk-management group, Vanguard, said: “This development reflects a stark expansion of Ukraine’s use of uncrewed aerial systems against maritime assets associated with Russia’s sanctioned oil export network.” Speaking to the online outlet Ukrainska Pravda, a Ukrainian official justified the strike. “This tanker was used to circumvent sanctions and earn money that was used for the war against Ukraine. Therefore, from the point of view of international law and the laws and customs of war, this is an absolutely legitimate target for the SBU. The enemy must understand that Ukraine will not stop and will beat him anywhere in the world, wherever he is.” According to Vessel Finder, the tankerwas last in port in Suez, Egypt, on 16 December and was off the coast of Libya when it turned back. Kyiv has claimed similar hits on Russia-linked tankers off Turkey’s Black Sea coast, after two empty oil tankers were hit by explosions. The Ukrainian attacks follow increasingly aggressive efforts by a number of countries against shadow fleet activities. This month, US forces boarded a sanctions-hit shadow tanker off Venezuela, and the Trump administration has announced a blockade of other shadow tankers in the country as part of Donald Trump’s apparent efforts to force regime change. European countries have also boosted efforts against shadow tankers operating in their waters amid mounting concern over the security and environmental threat posed by the ageing vessels, which often travel without automatic identification systems to avoid being tracked. During the press conference Putin struck to his familiar hard-line on the war in Ukraine, reiterating the Kremlin’s determination to continue fighting until all of its conditions are met. The Russian leader insisted that Moscow had no plans to invade Europe, before adding that there would be no new “special military operations” provided Russia was treated with respect and “not deceived”. Putin also called the use of frozen Russian central bank assets to finance Ukraine’s reconstruction “robbery” and said Moscow would pursue legal challenges, adding that it would “find a suitable jurisdiction” for any cases.

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‘She was like a deer in headlights’: how unskilled radical birthkeepers took hold in Canada

When the holistic practitioner Emma Cardinal, 32, became pregnant in May 2023, she planned to have a home birth with midwives. Cardinal lives in a town in British Columbia with strong counter-cultural roots. “The community that I live in, home birth is something a lot of women prioritise,” she explains. Then Cardinal stumbled across a podcast from the Free Birth Society (FBS). One episode in particular, she says, made an impact: “Unpacking Ultrasound With Yolande Clark.” In it, the Canadian ex-doula Yolande Norris-Clark falsely links ultrasounds to autism and ADHD and states that “ultrasound damages and modifies and destroys cells”. Norris-Clark, who was born in Vancouver, is arguably the most famous freebirth influencer in the world. She is also a key figure in FBS, a US company run by her business partner and fellow ex-doula Emilee Saldaya. FBS, which promotes an extreme version of free birth in which women abandon any form of prenatal care and give birth without doctors or midwives present, is estimated to have generated more than $13m in revenues since 2018. A recent Guardian investigation identified 48 cases of late-term stillbirths or neonatal deaths or other forms of serious harm involving mothers or birth attendants who appear to be linked to FBS. The intellectual heft behind FBS, Norris-Clark shaped the organisation’s radical position on birth, while Saldaya, its founder, runs the business. Most women find FBS through its Instagram account, which has 132,000 followers, or podcast, which has been downloaded 5m times. But Norris-Clark is a significant social media influencer in her own right, pioneering a radical version of free birth that concerns even pro-freebirth advocates. After listening to the podcast about ultrasounds, Cardinal was alarmed. “I was petrified of miscarriage and stillbirth,” she says, explaining that her younger brother was stillborn. “There’s not a chance I’m risking that.” Cardinal came to believe ultrasounds “aren’t super safe for the baby”. At that stage, Cardinal had not yet decided to freebirth. She phoned a local midwifery practice and explained that she wanted a home birth, but did not want to have any ultrasounds during her pregnancy. But the receptionist, Cardinal recalls, said that if she wanted to give birth with them, ultrasounds were non-negotiable. Cardinal thought about it, and decided she was not comfortable proceeding. Instead, after listening to about 100 episodes of the FBS podcast, Cardinal decided to freebirth. In one journal entry, she wrote: “I know it in my bones that freebirthing is my safest and most liberated option.” She purchased FBS’s popular video course, “The Complete Guide to Freebirth”. Cardinal’s son Floyd was stillborn in March 2024. During labour Cardinal saw meconium in her waters, a possible sign of distress, but dismissed it because “I was told by FBS that meconium is totally normal”. She stayed home for three days, because “I remember hearing Emilee Saldaya’s voice in my head [from the podcasts], saying: ‘I wouldn’t be concerned for the first three days.’” After Floyd died, Cardinal was hospitalised with sepsis and placed in an induced coma. She has had a number of surgeries to repair the damage from his birth, and had to wear an ostomy bag for a time. “I didn’t think that could even be a reality that could happen after birth,” she says. “I almost had to have a hysterectomy.” Looking back, Cardinal believes that much of the information she received from FBS was “incomplete, biased, one-sided and kind of dogmatic”. This includes the information she received on ultrasounds, which are not harmful to unborn babies when used appropriately. She adds: “You can’t just post about the good side of free birth. What happens when it goes very wrong?” Norris-Clark has not responded to repeated requests for comment about the Guardian’s investigation, which is told through The Birth Keepers podcast series. She has previously defended her partnership with Saldaya, saying FBS is “the most ethical kind of business you can run”. Critics of FBS, she has said, fail to understand the commitment to women taking “radical responsibility” for their births. And she has said it is unfair to hold her responsible for the choices of a mother who consumes her content. However the spotlight on tragedies involving mothers around the world who consumed FBS content is posing a crisis for the business. Saldaya has also not provided a substantive response to requests for comment, but told the Guardian in one email that “some of these allegations are false or defamatory”. She has previously responded to criticism by saying she does not care if women freebirth, but wants them to have the choice. In recent comments to her followers, she described the Guardian’s reporting as “propaganda” based on “lies”, and suggested her work, words and character had been misrepresented by “twisted, dark attacks”. Cardinal is not the only Canadian woman to lose their child after an FBS-influenced free birth. Although Canada has universal healthcare, it is a sparsely populated country, with large “midwifery deserts”. Alternative communities can be sceptical of licensed professionals. As in other parts of the world, FBS messaging often resonates with women who have had traumatic experiences of maternity services or unnecessary medical interventions. The Covid pandemic also eroded many women’s trust in the medical establishment. Not all of the women who want to avoid licensed providers are ready to freebirth. Some turn to unlicensed attendants, believing they offer their best chance to avoid hospital for their birth. Canada has a community of unlicensed birth attendants, in part due to the historic status of midwifery in the nation. Unlike other countries with strong cultures of midwifery, such as the Netherlands and Denmark, Canada has lagged behind other developed nations when it comes to recognising midwifery. Midwives and their clients can sometimes encounter scepticism, or even hostility, from healthcare professionals. It is in this context that women turn to unlicensed attendants, some of whom, while unregulated, are skilled and experienced underground midwives. But others – such as those who enrolled only in a brief online FBS course – have limited or no experience of births, and no adequate skills for managing potential emergencies. ‘I actually don’t believe gravity is true’ The most popular of FBS’s schools, the Radical Birthkeeper School, has trained 850 “authentic midwives” from more than 30 countries. On its three-month Zoom course, only about half the content deals with birth, and the rest focuses on self-development and business skills. There are at least 22 FBS-accredited birth keepers in Canada, according to an online directory seen by the Guardian. FBS advises its radical birth keepers – or RBKs – to get out in the world and begin attending births. “The very best way to learn how to do midwifery is by doing midwifery,” Saldaya told her RBK students in 2025. Many have since set up their own businesses supporting women during their free births. Alexandra Smith, 29, a life coach who hired an FBS-trained RBK for her birth, is from Vancouver Island. “It’s a different way of thinking out here. People prefer to be off grid,” Smith explains. “It’s a holistic space, with lots of hippies, everyone is about free birth and Waldorf education.” Norris-Clark, she adds, is “very popular where I live”. She says women in her area see Norris-Clark as the “founding mother” of free birth, who has “brought a solution to systemic problems” in Canada. During her pregnancy, Smith says, she listened to the FBS podcast regularly, sometimes multiple episodes a day, and that she found Norris-Clark particularly captivating. Were it not for FBS, she says, she would have had a home birth with a midwife. Many of the women who follow Norris-Clark on social media, seeking advice in their pregnancies, are unaware of her more extreme views, which she sometimes revealed to FBS students. “I actually don’t believe that gravity is true,” she told FBS students in 2024, adding: “Maybe that just makes me crazy and that’s totally OK.” In another class, she told students they could cut a baby’s umbilical cord with an “old rusty fork”. “I don’t believe in germ theory,” she said, “I don’t believe in contagion,” adding: “But even if contagion were real … there would be a pretty much 0% chance of anything happening.” Such radical beliefs are not part of FBS’s slick advertising and promotional materials. Smith says she believed, based on FBS marketing, that RBKs were “trained, unregistered midwives”. “I feel like I was falsely advertised to,” she says. (Others have made similar complaints about FBS. Earlier this year a lawyer for FBS responded to a consumer protection complaint filed in North Carolina alleging a course was mis-sold by stating that the company had always been transparent that it was offering “personal development and sovereign-birth related education” rather than certified midwifery training.) The RBK who Smith hired to attend her during her free birth was in her mid-20s. In a video testimonial she filmed for the RBK school, which had been available online until recently, she said the school “wasn’t your typical school in that it provides hard facts, information, data, and all of that stuff. It was different in that what I gained from the experience was this deep trust in birth, the deep sense of knowing that birth unfolds beautifully if we just step out of the way.” When it came to the birth, Smith alleges her RBK was woefully underprepared and “like a deer in headlights”. The RBK, Smith says, missed signs her labour was unfolding abnormally. When Smith’s son Aksel was born on 7 May 2023, his umbilical cord was white, and he was floppy and unresponsive. The RBK, she says, did not attempt to resuscitate the baby, and Smith had to tell her to call 911. Aksel was rushed to hospital, and diagnosed with severe hypoxic-ischaemic encephalopathy due to oxygen deprivation caused by a placental abruption at his birth. The RBK has not responded to requests for comment. Legal cases and public warnings As unlicensed attendants, including those trained by FBS, proliferate across Canada, the authorities are seeking to clamp down on the practice. On Vancouver Island, Canada’s most famous unlicensed birth attendant, Gloria Lemay, 78, is awaiting trial for manslaughter after a girl died 10 days after her birth, which Lemay attended, in January 2024. It is her latest legal battle in a near five-decade long career. In 1986, Lemay was convicted of criminal negligence causing death after a baby was born dead at a birth she attended, although she was later acquitted, with the supreme court upholding a lower court’s judgment that a child that is not yet born cannot be considered a person. Four years later, after a baby boy died of an infection three days after a birth attended by Lemay, she was fined $1,000 for refusing to answer questions at the inquest. In 2002, Lemay was found in contempt of an order prohibiting her from acting as a midwife. She was arrested in relation to the most recent case in January 2025. A case management conference is scheduled for January 2026. Lemay declined to comment on her upcoming trial, but it is understood she plans to contest the charges and plead not guilty. Norris-Clark always credits Lemay with inspiring her lifelong passion for birth. Lemay attended Norris-Clark’s first two births, and trained her as a doula. However those familiar with both women’s careers say Norris-Clark’s views on birth are more extreme than those of her one-time mentor. Lemay remains a highly divisive figure. Viewed by some in the medical establishment as a dangerous charlatan, she is equally beloved by many in the birth world, who regard her as a folk hero comparable to the legendary US midwife Ina May Gaskin. The Birth Care Alliance, a campaign to counter what it says is the “systemic overreach into birth sovereignty and midwifery”, is fundraising for her defence. (So too is Norris-Clark, who has described Lemay’s trial as “the attempted martyrdom of a cherished elder”.) Lemay’s supporters say she wished to retire years ago, but was repeatedly asked to attend births by women who wanted to give birth outside the system. They say she is highly skilled, supports medical transfer when necessary, and has attended thousands of births in her career, of which only very few ended in tragedy. To her detractors, Lemay is a thorn in the side of the medical establishment, and the authorities have repeatedly targeted her. But Canadian health authorities are also warning about less famous, and considerably less skilled, attendants, some of whom are FBS-affiliated. In 2023 the British Columbia College of Nurses and Midwives put out an advisory notice warning the public about the RBK hired by Smith, saying she was not entitled to practise as a midwife, and that she could be offering midwifery services without being permitted to do so. (The Guardian has seen no evidence that she continued to attend births after Smith’s in May 2023.) The following year, a different FBS-linked birth attendant was banned from hospitals across Alberta unless she was seeking medical care for herself or her family. The woman, who marketed herself as a “traditional midwife”, had been a member of the FBS membership community and appeared as a guest on its podcast. A number of complaints were filed against her by concerned staff at two Calgary hospitals after she was linked to two stillbirths in 2021. (Her lawyer told the Guardian that her birth services have been limited to non-medical support.) Smith’s son Aksel spent five weeks in hospital before being discharged in June 2023. Deprived of oxygen during birth, he had severe disabilities and was fed through a tube. Smith was his full-time carer. “You’re just trying to wrap your head around what happened,” she recalls of that time, “and my mental state was: how do we find a cure, how do we fix this?” She goes on: “It’s very lonely having a medically complex child in a holistic community. When things go awry, it’s like it’s your fault.” Aksel lived for six and a half months, before he died. “In my grief,” says Smith, “it’s hard to think about how things could have been different.”

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EU’s Ukraine loan may have been Plan B, but don’t underestimate its significance to the bloc

The EU’s failure to agree a “reparations loan” to Ukraine backed by frozen Russian assets was a political blow to the bloc’s big beasts, but the last-gasp alternative it devised will do the job – and marks a potentially significant first. After a marathon 16 hours of talks, EU leaders early on Friday agreed to fund Ukraine, which risked running out of money by next April, with a much-needed €90bn (£79bn) loan. But the solution they came up with was not the one most had wanted. More than two months ago, the European Commission floated a plan to provide a loan to Kyiv secured against some of the €210bn of Russian central bank assets frozen in Europe, most of which are held at the Euroclear clearing house in Belgium. The idea was for the EU to borrow from Euroclear in order to lend to Ukraine. Russia would remain the legal owner of the assets, and Kyiv would repay the loan using Russian reparations after the war, with the EU then reimbursing Euroclear. It looked neat, it was – EU lawyers argued – legally watertight, and appealed for two main reasons: it involved no new common borrowing, and there was a certain moral satisfaction in seeing Russian money help Ukraine fight off Russian aggression. There was an obstacle, however. The Belgian prime minister, Bart De Wever, argued that Moscow, which saw the plan as theft, would retaliate, and that courts in Russia-friendly jurisdictions, such as China, could order Belgian assets to be seized. For weeks, De Wever held out, resisting heavy pressure in particular from the commission chief, Ursula von der Leyen, and her compatriot Friedrich Merz, the German chancellor, for whom the “reparations loan” was Plan A, with no Plan B. The alternative – joint borrowing – may have appealed to some southern EU countries but was strongly opposed by Berlin and its frugal northern European allies, who did not fancy underwriting more debt for already overburdened fellow member states. Up until the start of Thursday’s EU summit, leaders and diplomats were convinced De Wever – whose popularity has soared at home – would cave. Instead, he demanded unlimited cash support from every EU member in the event of any Russian claim. That was too much. And so, backed principally by Italy’s Giorgia Meloni but also increasingly by the French president, Emmanuel Macron, Plan B – using unallocated funds in the EU budget as collateral for a collective loan for Ukraine – won the day. Objections that a eurobonds alternative required unanimity were overcome, in a historic and potentially far-reaching move, by securing the backing of Eurosceptic Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic in exchange for exemption. The result was first and foremost hugely important for Ukraine, which will also get its much-needed cash sooner than under Plan A. It was a political loss for von der Leyen and Merz – although the German chancellor expressed delight with the deal. It was a victory for a jubilant De Wever, who said “rationality has prevailed” and “the voice of small and medium-sized member states counts”, and good news for Eurosceptic prime ministers Viktor Orbán, Andrej Babiš and Robert Fico. They can go home and boast to their populist bases that the taxpayers of, respectively, Hungary, the Czech Republic and Slovakia will not be asked to stump up anything for Ukraine’s defence. Friday’s deal once again laid bare the deep divisions that so often hobble the EU’s decision-making, and underlined how far it still has to go to create a fully united Europe that can can act effectively and decisively in a hostile world. But the bloc did manage to pull together an agreement for an existentially important end. It may even, analysts suggested, have found a new path forward. This was a “huge deal for EU”, said Guntram Wolff, of the Bruegel economic thinktank. “If you want to do EU foreign policy, you need EU resources and debt. The European Council delivered,” he said, adding that the summit also marked, significantly, the first time that a decision on new EU debt had been reached without unanimity. Alberto Alemanno, a professor of EU law, agreed the deal was “unprecedented”. Allowing willing states to move forward had never before been tried for “EU budget-backed borrowing, with selective participation in collective liability”, he said. “Debt without unanimity … Is that the long-term direction for common European resources?” asked Jeremy Cliffe, of the European Council on Foreign Relations. If it is, Thursday’s summit could go down as something of a landmark.

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Richard Moth appointed Roman Catholic archbishop of Westminster

The new leader of the Roman Catholic church in England and Wales has been named as Bishop Richard Moth. Moth, 67, was appointed by Pope Leo to replace Cardinal Vincent Nichols as archbishop of Westminster and leader of about 6 million Catholics in England and Wales. Moth, who was bishop of Arundel and Brighton since 2015, said: “I am moved greatly by the trust that Pope Leo has placed in me, in appointing me to the diocese of Westminster.” He added: “My first task will be to get to know the priests and people of Westminster and I look forward now to serving them. With them, and building on the firm foundations that have been laid by so many down the years, I look forward to continuing the great adventure that is the life of the church and witness to the gospel.” He paid tribute to Nichols, saying the outgoing archbishop had “given dedicated service to the diocese and will be missed greatly”. Nichols, 80, offered to resign when he turned 75 but was asked by the late Pope Francis to stay in his post. He took part in the conclave this year to choose a new pope. Nichols said he was delighted at the appointment. “I remember being present in Westminster Cathedral on 29 September 2009 for the episcopal ordination of Bishop Richard as bishop of the forces. So today I can say: ‘Welcome back, dear Bishop Richard. You are most welcome indeed.’” Moth, who was born in Zambia and brought up in Kent, intervened in the debate over assisted dying, encouraging clergy and parishioners to write to their MPs to express their concerns and to ask them to vote against the proposed legislation. He recently put his name to a statement calling for empathy for “those who come to this country for their safety”, reminding Catholics that Jesus’s family fled to Egypt as refugees. He has also helped lead the Catholic church’s work on social justice issues in the UK and praised the scrapping of the two-child benefit cap. Before becoming bishop of Arundel and Brighton, Moth served as bishop of the forces for six years. He is the chair of governors at St Mary’s University, Twickenham and liaison bishop for prisons. Moth has been an oblate of Pluscarden Abbey, a community of Catholic Benedictine monks in Scotland, for more than 40 years, and is a member of the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem. He will be formally appointed at Westminster Cathedral on 14 February.