the guardian report the situation in ukraine a state of emergency as the us warns putin is ready to invade. the i also report on the state of emergency in ukraine as it feels a knot of fear . the ft says that brussels hits putin s inner circle as us hardens it s invasion warning to russia. meanwhile, the metro report that putin has gone full tonto in response to comments made by defence secretary ben wallace over the russian president sending troops into ukraine. meanwhile, the telegraph say that chancellor rishi sunak vows to slash the tax burden. but not just yet. the daily mirror simply say, welcome to hell. so, let s begin. with the guardian if we can and operate let s begin with you because the front page is leading with ukraine. it is still moving with developments obviously coming in all the time on this. but everyone is warning of a potentially imminent threat here. warning of a potentially imminent threat here-
operation as for now, looking at previous fighting we have had i can tell you we are trained better. we have stronger moral and spirit. because we re at home. they are afraid. they go because they are made to. he s been battled hardens since the first russian invasion in 2014. his side has enough weapons and ammunition, and determination to win. i can tell you i m almost sure the russians are regrouping and not retreating, he says. besides we are preparing ourselves to go forward. we re not preparing just to defend here. u.s. and british intelligence say putin seems to have quote massively misjudged this situation. and clearly, over estimated the ability of his military to secure a rapid victory. this old lady tells us i have seen one war and here we go again. i wish putin would go away.
throwing out lava and ash that killed at least 15 people. rescuers have been trying to dig through the volcanic mud to reach possible survivors before the ground cools and hardens. japan is one of the world s biggest users of coal. it s still building coal fired power stations against the rising tide of concern about climate change. as the country has no reserves of its own, vast quantities of coal have to be imported. and yet, the tokyo government is promising to reach net carbon zero by 2050. it appears to see hydrogen as one of the key ways of achieving that but how will they produce the hydrogen? rupert wingfield hayes has been finding out. takao saiki and his fellow activists are furious. the reason, this giant new coal fired power station being built in their hometown. i m totally against the burning fossil fuels because
and certainly, that s how it was in russellville, arkansas. our town were a first impression hardens like a patch of summit. about her and also about for better or worse, the young man accused of killing her. the boyfriend who found the body. the boyfriend found a body. first impressions die hard. including first impressions of murder. and years later in the small southern town we had to ask candy ever change. of course that question is quite obvious now to kevin. jones but years ago, he didn t care who he impress or didn t. all he knew was this, he was going places. he was from a good family. lived near a wonderful city near called russellville, and was well liked. oh, and was adored by one girl in particular. his high school sweetheart, nona dirksmeyer. so she was kind of like a soulmate i suppose? yeah, i was closer to her
that he would back the efforts to move forward on that budget plan. i think the first thing for all of us to do, out of the respect of of the people working hard on the reconciliation bill is to look at the contents. i m just getting the information now and so i m keeping an open mind. so you could support a bill i m not saying that i can or i can t. i m looking at everything from my colleagues. will you support moving forward with the budget resolution. we should move forward with the budget resolution. but there is no guarantees and every bill should go up. reporter: that is a key point. we should move forward on the budget resolution. democrats will be hardens to hear that because that is closer to getting all of the members in line when this comes up for a vote, the first step in the next several days here. but there are still a lot of hurdles that they have to go through. they have to draft that legislation. they have to get their members in line and get it through b