intentionally or recklessly. and london s metropolitan police under scrutiny, a damning report find evidence of institutional racism, misogyny and homophobia . we start with an accusation from both china and russia that the united states is undermining global stability. it came on the final day of president s xi jinping state visit to moscow. there was plenty of pomp and ceremony. the chinese leader was treated to an orchestral rendition of the chinese and russian anthems, before moving in to the grand hall of the order of st catherine for talks. but consider the circumstances: with russia under heavy international sanctions and increasingly reliant on china. high on the agenda was the war in ukraine and beijing s12 point peace proposal to resolve the conflict, which vladimir putin said could be used as a basis to end the war. but the russian leader said the west had dissmissed the proposals as the basis for talks. we believe that many of the provisions and the peace plan pu
their work in afghanistan. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are nigel nelson, who s the political editor of the sunday mirror and sunday people, and the political commentatorjo phillips. belated merry christmas to you both. i ll be with you in a moment. i m just going to take our viewers there if the front pages. the guardian has analysis of train delays on its front page. the paper claims over half ofjourneys from the uk s busiest stations have experienced delay an investigation into energy companies leads the front page of the daily telegraph/ of the daily telegraph. the paper says direct debits are going up even when accounts are in credit. the i leads on a survey from the british medical association, which suggests two thirds ofjunior doctors are trying to leave the nhs. meanwhile, the front page of the daily mail claims fees for agency staff are sucking the nhs dry. it says that the health service is being charg
bringing us tomorrow. with me are the political commentatorjo phillips and the political editor of the sunday people and the sunday mirror, nigel nelson. tomorrow s front pages, starting with. the observer leads on reaction to comments by borisjohnson that he s planning for a third term, with senior conservatives apparently calling him delusional . according to the telegraph, the prime minister is planning to impose sweeping new steel tariffs as he tries to win back support in red wall seats, but the paper says he could be accused of breaking international law. the sunday mirror reports on a high court verdict that government plans to house asylum seekers were unlawful. the sunday times has further allegations about prince charles by the paper s investigations team. crackdown on militant unions is the lead for the express, with suggestions that the prime minister is being urged by the attorney general not to give an inch to striking rail staff. so, let s begin. we are goin
pope francis celebrates mass in canada, but there s been a mixed response to his apology for the church s role in the abuse of indigenous people. england beat sweden and that women zero semifinal giving them a chance to any first ever major women s tournaments. welcome to world news america on pbs, in the uk and around the globe. we begin tonight with a bbc news investigation in ukraine, which has uncovered the abuse and neglect of disabled people locked away in institutions. the country s at war, but this problem pre dates russia s invasion. human rights groups say ukraine should not be allowed tojoin the eu until it abolishes a care system which is failing the most vulnerable. the bbc s disability news producer, ruth clegg, and bbc correspondent danjohnson have this report. and a warning, there are scenes that some viewers may find upsetting. far from the front line. i ve been to hundreds of institutions and i get a sick feeling in the pit of my stomach. international inv