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tonight at ten, european leaders are to open talks with ukraine about eu membership, to the delight of president zelensky. but on the ground, the fight against russia's occupying force is struggling — we report from the front line on ukraine's need for more military aid. president putin says russia's war aims have not changed in a four—hour press conference. steve rosenberg was there and gives us his assessment. also, the british boy, missing for six years, found in a small town in the south of france. big developments here in the southern french city of toulouse, where mystics alex, who has been gone for six years, is being brought back home by british police from the city in the coming hours. the pioneering premier league referee — rebecca welch will be the first woman to do the job. and will you see the shower of shooting stars, set to peak this evening? and on newsnight at 10:30pm, we'll go deeper behind the headlines and speak live to key players on today's big stories. plus, we take a first look at what's on tomorrow's front pages. good evening. european leaders have agreed to open eu membership talks with ukraine — a decision hailed by president zelensky as a victory for his country and for europe. ukraine, along with moldova, applied to join the eu after russia launched its full—scale invasion of ukraine in february 2022. these are the battle lines as they currently stand. today, president putin, speaking in his first news conference since the war, said there will be no peace in ukraine until russia achieves its objectives there. in a moment, we'll have more from moscow, and also from the ukrainian capital, kyiv. but first our correspondent abdujalil abdurasulov reports from the front line in bakhmut in the east of ukraine, where troops are under pressure because of a dwindling supply of military hardware. in the bitter cold of winter, this deadly war grinds on, and big guns, provided by western partners, still play a crucial role. ukraine's 93rd brigade is stationed near bakhmut. they say the russians attack at least twice a day. theirjob — to stop them advancing. as the conflict turns to stalemate, ukrainian soldiers say they need the support of their international partners more than ever. it is demoralising for them to hear that, instead, america's funding for ukraine has ground to a halt. translation: if there is no support from the western countries, - then it's going to get really bad. russia will seize ukraine, then it will be the turn of the baltic states and poland. i don't think the russians will stop here. our conversation is interrupted by orders to destroy a new target. the crew has to be quick. after a long silence, they're told to stand down and hide the howitzer. but these soldiers worry that guns will remain silent for much longer without new us funding and supplies. these are 155mm calibre artillery shells, and most western weapons and artillery systems that ukraine has received, use these types of shells, and therefore the shortage of these rounds will mean that those big guns will have to fire less, and that, in its turn, will have a huge impact here on the front line. there's already a serious lack of ammunition for western weapons, and the shortage is worse for old soviet guns. the commander of this ageing soviet howitzer unit admits that they have to use shells carefully. after loading, the crew waits for hours for the command to open fire on a high—value target. they simply cannot afford to waste ammunition on anything else. the difficult days ahead are uncertain, but these soldiers say their determination is not. abdujalil abdurasulov, bbc news, donetsk region in eastern ukraine. let's go live to kyiv, jess parker is there. a call this week for more money and weapons for kyiv, not quite answered as ukraine had hoped, but presumably very pleased with developments today around eu membership. absolutely, the decision to open membership talks will be hugely welcomed here in ukraine. remember, they applied tojoin welcomed here in ukraine. remember, they applied to join the eu right after russia's full scale invasion, but for many, the move towards europe is a long held ambition rooted in values they feel they are fighting for right now. for president zelensky, the decision is something that he desperately wanted and frankly desperately needed. he has, as you say, been trying to reenergise western support but left the us earlier this week having failed to secure some crucial defence funds from washington, dc, and ten i's decision in brussels was hanging in the balance, eu leaders pushed it through in a pretty bizarre fashion, and the only one to oppose the plans, hungry�*s viktor orban, left the room as the decisions were made. this is an obstacle to overcome, though, and while ukrainians know the road to eu membership is a long one with no guarantees of success, it is a morale boost right when they needed one. president putin has insisted that russian troops are improving their positions across the entire front line in ukraine. he spoke in a marathon four—hour press conference, where our russia editor, steve rosenberg, tried to pose some questions. there haven't been many — actually, any — opportunities for western media to get anywhere near vladimir putin since his full—scale invasion of ukraine. but today, the kremlin invited us and otherforeign media to the president's end—of—year tv extravaganza — half press conference, half phone—in. on the war in ukraine, he sounded confident. translation: there will be peace when we achieve our goals. - they haven't changed. practically along the entire line of contact, our armed forces are, to put it modestly, improving their position. they are in an active stage of operation. there was a definite military theme to the show, which was broadcast by every main tv channel in russia and went on for hours. the public had plenty of questions about what the kremlin�*s still calling its special military operation, like would there be a new wave of mobilisation in russia? mr putin said no. this didn't happen last year. the kremlin had cancelled the annual putin phone—in and his end—of—year press conference following the full—scale invasion of ukraine. the fact that the four—hour tv marathon is back reflects his growing confidence nearly two years into the war. he was asked about two americans being held in russianjails — wall streetjournal reporter evan gershkovich and former marine paul whelan. is a prisoner swap possible? translation: we want to do a deal, but these agreements should be mutually beneficial. we're in contact with our american partners on this matter. a dialogue is under way. it's not easy. i won't go into detail, but in general i think we understand each other and i hope that we will find a solution. irina was lucky — she got a question about egg prices. "you're my favourite president," she says. but all i got, after four hours, was a sore arm. pity, that. i have so many questions for vladimir putin. another day, perhaps. steve rosenberg, bbc news, moscow. a 17—year—old british boy who went missing in spain in 2017 has been found in france, according to the french authorities. alex batty, who's from oldham, was discovered walking along a road in a town near toulouse early on wednesday morning. chris bockman is in toulouse tonight. chris. good evening. a public prosecutor in the courthouse behind me has told me that alex has been handed over to british authorities, police are coming with consular officials to bring him back to the uk, and he could be, after six years away, back in the uk, in oldham, within hours. missing for six years but now found, alex batty from oldham was just 11 years old when he disappeared in southern spain. he'd been on holiday with his mother and grandfather — neither were his legal guardians. melanie and david batty were accused of abducting alex, possibly to take him to live in a commune in morocco. this is the road where he was found in south—west france by a delivery driver, fabien accidini, about an hour from the city of toulouse. translation: he explained that he'd been walking for four days, | that he'd set off from a place in the mountains, though he didn't say where. i typed his name into the internet and saw that he was being looked for. he then borrowed the driver's phone and messaged his grandmother back in england. he wrote, "hello, grandma, it's me, alex, i'm in france, toulouse." "i really hope that you receive this message." "i love you, i want to come home." back in 2018, his grandmother, who was his legal guardian, spoke to the bbc. it's been an absolute nightmare. ijust cannot explain to anyone how it feels, knowing you might not see... the grandson that you love so much, might not see him ever again. but she could soon be reunited with her grandson. officials in southern france say alex, now 17, will be handed over to british police and consular staff in the coming hours. alex was taken to a police station in the town of revel. they said he was well and hadn't been mistreated. a localjournalist told the bbc, alex seems to have been living with people with alternative lifestyles somewhere in the pyrenees mountains over the past two years and decided he didn't want to be part of it any more. chris bockman, bbc news, toulouse, south—west france. as the nhs heads into its most difficult time of the year, latest figures suggest waiting times in england are still failing to meet targets but have improved slightly on last year. patients are facing long delays for ambulances and to be seen in accident and emergency departments. sharon barbour has spent the day with two paramedics coping with the winter pressures. all of us are worried about winter pressures. we're worried about the system becoming overrun. so we've got a category one call, a male who is unconscious. their first call of the day, and ryan and debbie from the north west ambulance service are on their way to see a critically ill patient. please can we get some pads on him just in case? and then let's get some access. he was really septic and with his heart rate being so low, his blood pressure and saturations unrecordable, i believe he was at the stage just before going into cardiac arrest, he was that poorly. we're going to go on blue lights. 0ur eta to wigan is six minutes, over. can you open them eyes for me? hold my hand. ifeel really privileged to do ourjob. it's only a short distance to resus. within minutes of getting their patient into intensive care... do you think you can step out with us and we can get you straight into a chair? i know it's painful. so resus said they could make room for him in there. ..ryan and debbie are called to help another patient arriving at the hospital. you've had a facial weakness, is that right? we'll take you on blue lights, we'll get you seen straight away. then another call from control and another medical emergency. his observations are as follows, he's got a heart rate of 100... you just don't know what kind of call or where you're going to go to next. they've already been to four calls that have all been potentially life or death, and they're only halfway through their shift. good morning, north west 111, sarah speaking _ the pressure in the control room is palpable. but because of the sheer number of calls and as so many ambulances are held up at hospitals, across england the average response time for category two emergency calls such as heart attacks and strokes are still more than 38 minutes — that's more than double the target of 18 minutes. getting paramedics to patients is one stress. getting the patients inside the hospitals is another. i would say least over half of our ambulatory fleet, at times, can be waiting to hand over patients. and you can be talking, at times, hours for handovers. how many hours? so this week probably our longest handover was around 11 hours. and last week across england, nearly 13,000 ambulances were waiting for more than an hour to off—load patients. as ryan and debbie set off on yet another urgent call, they're aware that they're also driving into one of the busiest, most difficult winters ahead for the nhs. sharon barbour, bbc news. each winter for successive years, the nhs has been under sustained pressure, so what sort of priority is health spending for the devolved uk governments, and is more money the answer? 0ur verify correspondent nick eardley is here with those details. have a look at this first. this is a breakdown of government spending. this is health. you can see about a fifth of the total. let's take a look at the increase in health spending over time. as you can see, it goes up every year. but if you look closer it goes up faster in the run—up to 2010, when labour were in power. then it continues to go up, but at a much lower rate, after the conservative—led coalition takes over in 2010. there was this big spike during the covid years, then it goes down a bit after emergency funding was removed. now come back here. if the funding increases we saw before 2010 continued after 2010, this would have happened. there would be a lot more money in the health system. nobody was promising that after the financial crash, but it puts the funding increases in the past decade in context. clearly, money isn't the only issue. strikes have had a significant impact, particularly in england. covid did too. there's the ageing population. both the conservatives and labour are saying reform is part of the answer. but the question about whether there's enough cash to deal with the challenges in the nhs isn't going away. many thanks, nick. interest rates were held at 5.25% today, leaving borrowing costs at their highest level in 15 years. it was the third consecutive hold, and the question now is which way they will move next, and when, as our economics editor faisal islam reports. # last christmas, i gave you my heart...# liverpool's christmas market — the festive spirit is here, but little sign of a marked upturn in the economy. people here continuing to have to cope with new surges in the cost of living, even as inflation slows. i sold my car last week. car insurance had gone up, then i had the bank loan. it's everything, isn't it? wage increases, they're not in line with everything. to be honest, i've just i had my flat repossessed. so it has really affected us. and today, the bank of england confirmed that interest rates will remain at the current 5.25% level for an extended period. inflation, wages and the economy, including the construction sector, have been slower in britain than expected. but unlike in, say, the usa, the bank is still worried about higher underlying inflation. we've seen an unwinding of many of the shocks that we had, the big shocks that we had last year, particularly related to the war in ukraine and so on. but there is this persistent element to it which we've got to take out. so my view at the moment is, it's really too early to start speculating about cutting interest rates. one reason rate cuts are off the agenda is the inflation shock that washed ashore across the world is falling back more slowly in britain, and wage inflation is considerably higher here too, say the bank's experts. even though rates have been kept on hold today, the bank of england have pointed out that about half of the impact of the rate rises we've had over two years, that's five percentage points in total, are yet to filter out across the economy. and that might explain why, despite all those rate rises, the impact on the economy, on the housing market especially, has been softer than expected. despite the bank of england's words, mortgage brokers such as david are now seeing that fixed mortgage rates are starting to fall. santander, halifax, barclays. .. homeowners facing massive interest rate hikes have been lengthening the term of their mortgages, cushioning the blow short term. what they're doing is they're even borrowing slightly less than previous or looking at the term if they've got an existing mortgage. so when we come to remortgage it, they may take a longer term... how much longer? anywhere kind of 10, 15 years, depending on the age. inflation is falling, but the economy is not growing, and the turning point remains elusive. faisal islam, bbc news, in liverpool. a nurse who drugged patients on a stroke unit for an easy shift, and a health care worker who conspired with her, have been jailed. catherine hudson, here on the left, was found guilty of giving unprescribed sedatives to two patients at blackpool victoria hospital in 2017 and 2018. she was also convicted of conspiring with charlotte wilmot to give a sedative to a third patient. police in norwich have released new cctv footage of a woman who's been missing since last friday. gaynor lord, who's 55, was reported missing afterfailing to return home from work. officers say it's �*highly probable' she entered the nearby river wensum. specialist dive teams are continuing to search the area. israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu told us officials that israel will pursue its war against hamas, designated a terrorist organisation in the uk — until what he called an absolute victory. 0ur international editor jeremy bowen considers now whether the war in gaza has any chance of ending in a peaceful solution to the decades' old conflict between israelis and palestinians. jerusalem, a historian wrote, is the only city where the dead are more important than the living. he meant the weight of its bloody past, but it's the last two months and more of killing that have sent palestinians and israelis into new and unknown territory. and here in the holy city which both sides claim as their capital, they are tense, watchful, waiting. choices lie ahead. a cease—fire will come eventually. will itjust be a pause before the next war? or will israel and the palestinians decide that the only way to avoid more sorrow and death is to try again to make peace? arabs and jews have contested the land between the mediterranean and thejordan riverfor more than a century. this is hebron, on the israeli—occupied west bank. do you have many families left here? i can see since october 7th... and this is issa amro, a palestinian activist. since the 7th of october, palestinians who live near hebron�*s illegaljewish settlement have been mostly under a curfew. so, the army's coming. what do you think they want? intimidation. yeah? everything they do, it's about intimidating the palestinian population and make them scared, to make this area empty. that is what they do. issa is well—known in hebron, and the army regard him as a troublemaker. they didn't want us to film, but we did when one of the soldiers butted into our conversation. you don't know what it's like to grow up in israel with neighbours like this. i know them. i live with them. i want peace. they don't want peace. even the ones working for me, they hate me. take your mask off. take your mask off, i'm not your enemy. confrontation is built into israel's military occupation of the palestinian territories. peace is impossible while it continues. can you have peace? with them? no, we should force them to peace, pressure them. you should...? pressure them. pressure them? yes. the international community and international law must be implemented. the international community should make israel accept peace. do you think that the shock of the war in gaza and everything that's happened — the hamas attacks, everything that israel did in response — do you think that will change things orjust make them deeper and worse? i think its two opportunities. it's either we choose to make it deeper and worse, or we make it as an opportunity to solve the conflict and to solve the occupation, to solve the apartheid and make living together possible, because their security solution failed. israel says it has a right to be in hebron and this is security, not apartheid. this was kibbutz be'eri just after the 7th of october. the government here says the only response is to destroy israel's enemies. vivian silver lived at the kibbutz. she was one of israel's best—known peace campaigners. she believed israelis would never have real security until palestinians had their own state. 0n the seventh, she was at home, in the place where she'd brought up her two sons. the bodies of israelis killed by hamas were still being recovered when we went there to try to find vivian's house. her family hoped she was a hostage inside gaza. as hamas shot their way into be'eri, she texted her son, yonatan, that she feared a massacre. her house was burnt. a month later, vivian silver's remains were identified in the ash left by the fire. so, you were there, i i was there afterwards, and her bones were in the safe room all the whila — yonatan believes the war lacks a political objective. war, if we're not naive, - it should be a means, right? but it feels like this war is - a cause in itself, of revenge, of... ..0f making a point. you are still a believer in peace even though these people came over into your country and killed your mother? they came into my country and killed my mother- because we didn't have peace, so, to me, thisjust proves- the point that we need it. after the war, the americans want israel's walls and fences, here between jerusalem and bethlehem, to go from a security measure into an international frontier with an independent palestine. the current israeli government says the two—state solution will not happen. so, when the war is over, what needs to go right to give peace a chance? well, first of all, a change of leader on both sides. there's too much bad history, and they don't trust each other. next, there has to be even—handed mediation, something the americans have never managed to do. and as well as that, both israelis and palestinians are going to have to accept painful compromises on things that really matter to them, especially territory. so much has to go right to move from war to peace. so much has already gone wrong that peace mightjust be impossible. jeremy bowen, bbc news, jerusalem. the premier league has appointed its first female referee. rebecca welch, who's 40, started refereeing in 2010, and takes charge of her first top flight game next week — as nesta mcgregor reports. from a job working in health care to taking care of top—flight football in england. rebecca welch, history maker. having already been part of a matchday officiating team, when the ao—year—old former nhs administrator takes charge of fulham versus burnley on december 23rd, she'll become the first woman to referee a premier league match. we've got some really talented female officials both in the men's game and the women's game. rebecca is obviously leading that, obviously being a really good role model for women and girls who maybe might think refereeing is for them. we are working hard to show that refereeing is for all, increase our diversity, which has not been good enough. other sports including rugby union and cricket have already paved the way with female lead officials in men's elite sport. however, football has lagged a little. although france's stephanie frappart made world cup history last year when she took charge of costa rica versus germany in qatar. still, welch's appointment has surprised the likes of referee alison wade. surprised the likes of referee allison wade. how pivotal moment is this for english football? when i heard the news, i actually got goose bumps. it becomes part of the normal process rather than something that raises eyebrows and i think that's the key thing from a cultural perspective, is simply to make it normal. 0n boxing day, formerfirefighter sam allison will become the first black referee in the league since uriah rennie 15 years ago at a time ata time when video referrals has increased the scrutiny of officials, rebecca welch and sam allison may be hoping their achievements pass without examination. nesta mcgregor, bbc news. now, a meteor shower, known as the geminids, is peaking in skies around the world tonight. the multicoloured streaks of light are visible, depending on the weather where you are. in perfect conditions, you could spot up to dozens an hour. pallab ghosh has been star gazing for us. blink and you'll miss it. meteors hurtle through the skies of northumbria earlier this year. tiny fragments of space dust burning up in the earth's atmosphere. and these pictures from last night are the start of the biggest media shower of the year. meteor shower of the year. we can see if we look up now... it's cloudy in most parts of the country tonight. but astronomers say it's still worth looking up at the skies as the storm starts to peak. so it's not too bad, is it? it's not bad and there are clear patches, and frankly, that's what i'd be looking at. if you go outside, have a look in a clear patch, see if you can see some meteors. any techniques, any suggestions?

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