yevgeny prigozhin called off his rebellion after 24 hours of mayhem. roadblocks to stop his wagner forces are filled in, as the crisis is diffused. after a direct threat to his leadership, the questions over vladimir putin s future. well forces in ukraine assess how the turmoil will affect the progress of the war. also this morning, the public toll, they can now call 999 after earlier technical fault. plus, labor calls for mandatory help for homeowners struggling to meet rising mortgage payments. and the princess of wales takes on roger federer as she praises the work of ball girls and boys ahead of wimbledon. good morning. now, the rebellion by the russian mercenary leader yevgeny prigozhin appears for now, to be over. the russian president vladimir putin called it a knife in the back of our people, and said that his forces were traitors. but a deal has now been negotiated by belarus and the kremlin, said the rebel leader will be allowed to leave the country and his fighters
now on bbc news, political thinking with nick robinson. hello and welcome to political thinking. a conversation with, rather than a news like interrogation of someone who shaped our political thinking about what has shaped theirs. my guest this week made the cover of time magazine when they profiled the first muslim leader of a western democracy. he is, as the headline put it, the new face of scotland. the youngest leader this country has had in a quarter of a century of having a devolved scottish government. but this, admits humza yousaf, here in glasgow, has been a difficult yearfor him. difficult for his party, too, dogged by a police investigation, criticised for failing to deliver, and divided about when independence might actually be possible. humza yousaf, first minister, thanks forjoining me. my pleasure. it has been quite a year! you re telling me! how much do you feel you have aged in that time? i think people can probably look at pictures of before i became first m
projected to get to the lowest level in a generation and they have protected that it will have a 17 billion pounds to the economy to get the economy growing and every part of britain. forgive me if i may take you to the policy that you are espousing today which is put more money in the pockets of savers and actually, by your own figures out was looking at the release you put out today summing it up to 10,000 pounds in saving to get an extra 50 for the here from what you are proposing, how is that going to affect inflation? because it makes it more attractive for people to make money into their savings account rather if anybody has 10,000 to keep in their saving, what the effects would be marginal wouldn t they? sure, but what you are looking at is the magnitude for any government has to tackle it but for the chancellor he says that he is doing, we are proposing constructive ways in which he can help to ease the burden and ease the pain for people right now, one
because the boss of us chip giant intel has warned of a turbulent world this year. pat gelsinger has been speaking to our economics editor faisal islam at the world economic forum in davos. he said the current disruption to red sea shipping is another reason they were right to invest billions building factories in the us and europe rather than relying on asia. it s going to be a turbulent world, right? and obviously ukraine is still active, the israel situation, maybe broader implications in the middle east, obviously us china tensions. you know, it s a turbulent world in that regard. i think most view the economy probably a little bit slower to start with, some acceleration as we go through the year. and our strategy is very much around building resilient supply chains so that we re better prepared to handle some of the turbulence that we think is at least currently consistently seen year after year. just when we think things are calming down, it s not entirely calm ye