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  • Trump says progress made in Ukraine talks but ‘thorny issues’ remain

    Trump says progress made in Ukraine talks but ‘thorny issues’ remain


    Donald Trump and Volodymyr Zelensky said progress had been made to end the Ukraine war during Florida talks but the US leader added “one or two very thorny issues” remained.

    While both the US and Ukrainian presidents described the talks as “great”, Trump reiterated that a key sticking point was the question of territory. Russia has previously demanded that Ukraine hand over more land.

    Addressing reporters at Mar-a-Lago, Zelensky said they had come to an agreement on “90%” of a 20-point peace plan, while Trump said a security guarantee for Ukraine was “close to 95%” done.

    Zelensky later said US and Ukrainian teams would meet next week for further talks on issues aimed at ending Russia’s nearly four-year war in Ukraine.

    “We had a substantive conversation on all issues and highly value the progress that the Ukrainian and American teams have made over the past weeks,” Zelensky said in a statement on the Telegram messaging app.

    Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, and Moscow currently controls about 20% of Ukrainian territory.

    A proposal to turn the Donbas region in eastern Ukraine, which Russia largely controls, into a demilitarised zone remains “unresolved”, Trump said.

    “Some of that land has been taken,” he told reporters after the meeting. “Some of that land is maybe up for grabs, but it may be taken over the next period of a number of months.”

    Moscow currently controls about 75% of the Donetsk region, and some 99% of the neighbouring Luhansk. The regions are collectively known as Donbas.

    Russia wants Ukraine to pull back from the small part of the territory it still controls in Donbas, while Kyiv has insisted the area could become a free economic zone policed by Ukrainian forces.

    The US president has repeatedly changed his own position on Ukraine’s lost territories, and in September stunned observers by suggesting that Ukraine might be able to take it back. He later reversed course.

    “[That] is a very tough issue,” he said. “One that will get resolved.”

    Security guarantees for Ukraine are “95% done”, Trump said, without formally committing to logistical support or troop deployment to help protect Ukraine from future attacks.

    Trump floated the possibility of trilateral talks between the US, Russia, and Ukraine, saying it could happen “at the right time”.

    While the US president is keen to add the Ukraine-Russia war to the list of conflicts he claims to have ended, he cautioned that stalled or scrapped talks that go “really badly” could mean that the war continues.

    Earlier Trump had a phone call with Russian President Vladimir Putin. While the US president did not offer many details of the phone call, he said he believed the Russian leader “wants Ukraine to succeed”.

    At the same time, Trump acknowledged that Moscow had little interest in a ceasefire that would allow Ukraine to hold a referendum.

    “I understand that position,” he added.

    Russian foreign policy adviser Yuri Ushakov said the call was initiated by Trump and that he and Putin discussed the latest EU and Ukraine proposals to end the war.

    Ushakov, Russia’s former US ambassador, said Trump listened to the Kremlin’s assessment of the proposals and the two presidents left the call united in their belief that a temporary ceasefire proposed by the EU and Ukraine would instead prolong the conflict.

    Zelensky suggested the Ukrainian officials could meet at the White House in January, potentially alongside European leaders, as the US and Ukrainian delegations finalise plans for further talks.

    In a post-meeting call with European allies, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen hailed “good progress” in the Florida talks while reinforcing the need for Ukraine to receive “ironclad security guarantees from day one”.

    French President Emmanuel Macron also said Kyiv’s allies would meet in Paris next month to discuss security guarantees.

    “We will bring together the countries of the Coalition of the Willing in Paris in early January to finalise each one’s concrete contributions,” Macron said on X after speaking with Zelensky and Trump.



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  • Mexico train crash kills 13 and injures almost 100

    Mexico train crash kills 13 and injures almost 100


    Watch: Stranded passengers walk past derailed train as wounded are carried from carriages

    At least 13 people died and almost 100 were injured in a train derailment in Mexico’s south-eastern Oaxaca region, the Mexican navy said.

    The train, which was travelling between the Gulf of Mexico and the Pacific Ocean, was carrying 241 passengers and nine crew members.

    A total of 98 were injured, of whom 36 were being treated in hospital, the navy said.

    The train derailed as it rounded a bend near the town of Nizanda, officials said. Mexico’s Attorney General confirmed an investigation was under way.

    Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said five of those injured were in a serious condition.

    She said top level officials, including the secretary of the navy, were travelling to the site of the crash.

    Photos from the site of the crash showed rescue workers helping passengers alight the train, which had fallen off the rail tracks and partly tilted over the side of a cliff.

    The Interoceanic train, which connects the Pacific port of Salina Cruz with Coatzacoalcos on the Gulf Coast, had two locomotives and four passenger cars, the navy said. Mexico’s navy operates the country’s railway network.

    A map showing Nizanda in southern Mexico

    The governor of Oaxaca, Salomón Jara Cruz, expressed “deep regret” over the accident in a statement and said state authorities were coordinating with federal agencies to assist those affected.

    The Interoceanic rail link was inaugurated two years ago to boost the region’s economy, an initiative spearheaded by former President Andrés Manuel López Obrador.

    Designed to modernise the rail link across the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, the Mexican government has sought to develop the area into a strategic trade corridor, expanding ports, railways and industrial infrastructure.

    The train service is also part of a broader push to expand passenger and freight rail in southern Mexico and stimulate economic development in the region.



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  • Bondi hero says he wanted to stop gunman killing innocent people

    Bondi hero says he wanted to stop gunman killing innocent people


    The man who disarmed one of the gunmen who killed 15 people at a Jewish event at Bondi Beach has revealed his thoughts in the moments before his heroic actions.

    In verified footage, Ahmed al Ahmed – a Sydney shop owner born and raised in Syria – tackled one of the two shooters from behind, wrestling a long-arm gun from him.

    “I hold him with my right hand and start saying a word, you know, like to warn him – ‘drop your gun, stop doing what you’re doing’,” the father-of-two told the BBC’s US partner CBS News in an exclusive interview.

    Mr Ahmed, who was shot several times by the other alleged gunman, said his actions saved “lots of people… but I feel sorry still for the lost.”

    In the interview, Mr Ahmed recalled the moment he tackled Sajid Akram, 50, who was shooting attendees at a Hanukkah event at Bondi Beach on Sunday 14 December.

    “My target was just to take the gun from him, and to stop him from killing a human being’s life and not killing innocent people.”

    Fifteen people died during the attack – Australia’s deadliest mass shooting since 1996 – and 40 others were injured. Police have declared the attack a terrorist incident targeting the Jewish community.

    Sajid Akram was shot dead by police while his son Naveed, the other alleged gunman who was hospitalised after the attack, has since been charged with 59 offences including 15 counts of murder and one of committing a terrorist attack.

    Mr Ahmed described the inner thoughts running through his head in the lead-up to his actions, which authorities and politicians have said saved countless lives.

    “Emotionally, I’m doing something, which is I feel something, a power in my body, my brain,” Mr Ahmed said.

    “I don’t want to see people killed in front of me, I don’t want to see blood, I don’t want to hear his gun, I don’t want to see people screaming and begging, asking for help.

    “That’s my soul asking me to do that.”

    In the days after the shooting, Mr Ahmed was presented with a cheque at his hospital bedside for A$2.5m (£1.24m; $1.7m) which had been raised from tens of thousands of community members moved by his actions.

    He was shot several times in the shoulder after tackling Sajid Akram and required at least three operations.

    Australia’s Prime Minister Anthony Albanese visited Mr Ahmed in hospital, describing him as “the best of our country” while New South Wales Premier Chris Minns called him a “real-life hero”.

    Earlier, Mr Ahmed’s parents told BBC Arabic that their son was “driven by his sentiment, conscience and humanity”.



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