World
Starmer says UK, France to work with Ukraine on ceasefire plan
The UK prime minister says London and Paris will take the lead on drawing up a plan to ‘stop the fighting’, which will then be presented to US President Donald Trump.
British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said on Sunday that the UK and France will work with Ukraine to draw up a ceasefire plan to be presented to the United States.
The initiative came about after Starmer’s telephone diplomacy with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, US President Donald Trump and French President Emmanuel Macron following the acrimonious fallout between Zelenskyy and Trump in the Oval Office on Friday.
Speaking to the BBC in an interview ahead of a crunch international summit on Ukraine on Sunday, Starmer suggested that “possibly a few others” could be involved in drafting the ceasefire plan. He is set to welcome 18 leaders from Europe and Canada to London on Sunday for talks on Ukraine and bolstering European defence.
Starmer described his initiative as “an important step forward” after the ties between Kyiv and Washington were severely strained during Friday’s public confrontation between the Ukrainian and US presidents.
“No one wants this conflict to go on, least of all the Ukrainians,” Starmer told the BBC’s Laura Kuenssberg, adding that he believed Trump was also committed to a “lasting peace” in Ukraine.
Pressed on the details of the potential ceasefire plan that could be accepted by President Trump, Starmer said: “That means a line is agreed – the terms of the deal – and then that that line is defended.”
“President Zelenskyy is rightly concerned that if there’s to be a deal, it has to hold. That’s why we’ve talked extensively about what are the guarantees – in what way do we all defend the deal if that deal is made,” Starmer said.
“If there is to be a deal, if there is to be a stopping of the fighting, then that agreement has to be defended, because the worst of all outcomes is that there is a temporary pause and then Putin comes again. That has happened in the past, I think there’s a real risk,” Starmer went on.
Starmer sets out three components of potential ceasefire plan
The British prime minister has previously expressed openness to sending British troops as part of a potential peacekeeping contingent to Ukraine, but insists on the US providing security guarantees in the form of a ‘backstop’ to deter Russia from breaking the conditions of a ceasefire.
Trump hasn’t yet committed to such a backstop. The US President said on Thursday following a meeting with Starmer in Washington that he “would not make any security guarantees beyond very much – we’re going to have Europe do that.”
While European allies are not expecting the US to commit to sending American troops on the ground, UK government sources have suggested they are seeking US military cover, including in the air.
Starmer reiterated on Sunday that such US backing would be one of three essential components in a potential ceasefire plan.
“I’ve always been clear that that is going to need a US backstop because I don’t think it would be a guarantee without it, I don’t think it would be a deterrent without it, so the two have to go together,” Starmer said.
“So for me the components of a lasting peace are a strong Ukraine to fight back if necessary, to be in a position of strength to negotiate, a European element of security guarantees (…) and a US backstop.”
“That’s a package – all three parts need to be in place, and that’s what I’m working hard to bring together.”
Security guarantees are likely to be at the crux of discussions between European and Canadian leaders during Sunday’s summit in London. Starmer said those guarantees were essential as he believed “there’s a risk that Putin will come again if he’s given the opportunity to do so.”
Starmer has positioned himself as a diplomatic bridge between Europe and the US as efforts to initiate talks over Ukraine’s future intensify.
While several European leaders have rallied around Zelenskyy following Friday’s confrontation in the Oval Office, Starmer had been more cautious, speaking with both Zelenskyy and Trump in the immediate aftermath of their bust-up.
He said on Sunday that he trusted both Zelenskyy and Trump and insisted that the relationship between the US and the UK continues to be the “closest relationship of any two countries in the world.”
Starmer calls for security guarantees by ‘coalition of the willing’
Ahead of talks with over a dozen European leaders later on Sunday, Starmer also threw his weight behind the idea of a “coalition of the willing”, the prospect of like-minded countries moving in tandem to provide security guarantees to Ukraine without being held back by those more sceptical.
The EU’s foreign policy decisions require the unanimous backing of all 27 member states, a requirement which has often bogged down EU decisions in support to Ukraine.
Hungary and Slovakia are currently refusing to back plans to increase support to Ukraine in a summit of EU leaders to be held on Thursday in Brussels. It’s prompted calls for a group of like-minded EU countries to move ahead in a “coalition of the willing.”
Starmer used the same term to call on a group of like-minded countries to go ahead in promising security guarantees to Ukraine.
“We need to be clear what a European security guarantee would look like,” Starmer said. “I do acknowledge (…) that that’s more likely to be in the first instance a coalition of the willing, in other words, we’ve got to find those countries in Europe that are prepared to be more forward-leaning.”
“The UK and France are the most advanced in the thinking on this,” Starmer went on. “This is not an exclusion, the more the better in this, but we need to move to a quicker, more agile way of moving forward and I think that is a coalition of the willing.”
World
Video: What are Trump’s Options in Iran?
new video loaded: What are Trump’s Options in Iran?
By David E. Sanger, Coleman Lowndes, Nikolay Nikolov, Edward Vega and June Kim
January 14, 2026
World
Nigeria named epicenter of global killings of Christians over faith in 2025, report says
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JOHANNESBURG: A staggering and growing wave of persecution against Christians across sub-Saharan Africa has been laid bare in the latest Open Doors’ World Watch List for 2025. The report says three out of four Christians murdered worldwide are killed in Nigeria.
Fourteen of the top 50 countries worldwide where verified deaths could be reasonably linked to victims’ Christian faith are in sub-Saharan Africa. Open Doors is a global Christian charity supporting Christians persecuted for their faith.
The organization states that one in seven Christians in the world face high levels of persecution. But that figure rises to one in five in Africa.
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Woman in Benue State Christian refugee camp. The camp is inhabited by Christians who fled anti-Christian violence. (Open Doors)
Nigeria
Africa’s most populous nation is also ranked as the seventh worst in the world for persecution in all its forms. According to Open Doors, out of the 4,849 Christians killed for their faith globally in the year up to the end of Sept. 2025, 3,490 of these were murdered in Nigeria — 72% of the total.
Muslims have also been killed in Nigeria. But the latest data from the report shows Christians have been “disproportionately targeted.” These are four of the affected states — there are others:
In Benue State in north-central Nigeria, 1,310 Christians were killed compared with 29 Muslims.
In Plateau State in north-central Nigeria, 546 Christians were killed compared with 48 Muslims.
In Taraba State in northeast Nigeria, 73 Christians were killed compared with 12 Muslims.
In north-western Kaduna State, 1,116 Christians were abducted in 2025, compared with 101 Muslims.
US AMBASSADOR MICHAEL WALTZ DECLARES ATROCITIES AGAINST CHRISTIANS IN NIGERIA ‘GENOCIDE’
Funerals for some 27 Christians who were reportedly killed by Islamist Fulani tribesmen in the village of Bindi Ta-hoss, Nigeria on July, 28, 2025 (Courtesy: Christian Solidarity International (CSI))
“The latest figures should leave us in no doubt: there is a clear religious element to this horrific violence,” Henrietta Blyth, CEO of Open Doors U.K. told Fox News Digital.
Blyth added, “For many thousands of Christians, this will come as no surprise. Those who witnessed their families being killed, and their homes razed to the ground by Islamist Fulani militants report being told by their attackers that ‘we will destroy all Christians.’”
“It’s surely time to dismiss the idea that this violence is somehow ‘random,’” Blyth stated. “If we don’t recognize the clear religious element to the violence, it won’t be possible to properly address this tragic situation.”
Mohammed Idris, Nigeria’s minister of information and national orientation, told Fox News Digital this week, “The loss of life in any form is unacceptable, and the Nigerian government recognizes the pain felt by all affected families and communities.”
Pope Leo XIV condemned the killings of up to 200 people in Yelewata community in Nigeria. (Associated Press)
The minister continued, “Nigeria has consistently maintained that its security challenges stem from a convergence of criminal insurgency, armed banditry, resource competition, and localized communal disputes, not from state-directed or institutional religious persecution. The government remains focused on upholding its constitutional duty to protect all citizens and on advancing security reforms that improve coordination, accountability, and civilian safety nationwide.”
At the time of writing, the new World Watch List had not been released to the minister, but he did share his thoughts on Middle Belt killings, “With respect to the Middle Belt states, the Nigerian government has long stated that violence in this region is primarily driven by long-standing disputes over land and resources, organized banditry, and criminal networks that prey on vulnerable communities, Christian and Muslim alike.”
AFRICA’S CHRISTIAN CRISIS: HOW 2025’S DEADLY ATTACKS FINALLY DREW GLOBAL ATTENTION AFTER TRUMP’S INTERVENTION
He concluded, “while some attacks tragically take on communal or identity dimensions, framing the Middle Belt crisis as a systematic campaign against Christians does not reflect the full security reality on the ground and risks obscuring the role of criminal actors who exploit instability for profit and power.”
The Evangelical church in Omdurman, Sudan after being bombed even though it was not in a combat zone or used by any warring forces. (Open Doors)
Sudan
Some 150,000 are estimated to have died in the civil war that has engulfed this nation since 2023. Open Doors reports, “the situation for the nation’s 2 million Christians is especially grim.”
“We are considered as the enemy by both (opposing) factions, who accuse us of being allied with the other side,” Rafat Samir, general secretary for the Sudan Evangelical Alliance, told Fox News Digital. We are told ‘you don’t belong here’ and driven from our homes. To make matters worse, Christians are often excluded when aid is distributed.” A particular pattern can be seen across sub-Saharan Africa, Open Doors states. The report claims, “Islamist militants enter the vacuums in law and order left by a weak junta and civil conflicts. It means they can operate with impunity across parts of Burkina Faso, Mali, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Central African Republic, Somalia, Niger and Mozambique. Their stated aim is to create ‘Sharia states’ operating under their deadly interpretation of Islamic law.”
Church leaders of the Pentecostal Church in the northeast of Khartoum, stood by as their church building was demolished. The demolition was done under the premise that any building not complying with regulations would be destroyed in July 2025 in Sudan. (Open Doors.)
Elsewhere in the world, North Korea remains top of the list for having the world’s worst persecution of Christians, with Open Doors stating, “If Christians are discovered, they and their families are deported to labor camps or executed.”
A huge spike in reported violence against Christians in Syria has followed the fall of Bashar al-Assad’s presidency in Dec. 2024, and has led the country to jump to number six on the list. China is number 17, with churches driven underground by surveillance and heavy regulation.
In this photo released by the Syrian official news agency SANA, a Civil Defence worker inspects the damage inside Mar Elias church where a suicide bomber detonated himself in Dweil’a in the outskirts of Damascus, Syria, Sunday June 22, 2025. (SANA via AP)
The reporting period for the World Watch List ended some two months before President Trump ordered U.S. forces to bomb Muslim militants in northwestern Nigeria on Christmas Day to try to stop the killing of Christians.
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Jo Newhouse from Open Doors sub-Saharan Africa, told Fox News Digital, “The U.S. airstrikes (against Jihadi groups in Nigeria) have thrown many of the militant groups in the area into a state of panic. They have been scattering and attacking civilians as they come across soft targets, hoping that they can rebuild their resources through looting and kidnapping.”
“Many Christians across the northern states are in a state of flux, unable to find any safety or stability. They bear the scars of living under the perpetual risk of death, destruction and displacement,” Newhouse said.
World
EU Parliament questions defence loan’s ‘€17 billion gift’ to Hungary
Published on
The European Parliament is set to hold a debate about the allocation of public defence funds to Hungary over fears that the money may be misused by Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, who faces a difficult election in April.
The money in question is part of the EU’s Security Action for Europe (SAFE) programme, a €150 billion loan scheme that enables member states to finance the purchase of defence equipment.
This is a part of the plan to boost Europe’s defences in the light of both Russian threats and the uncertainty of support from the United States.
Hungary has requested €17.4 billion in SAFE funds to boost its army. This would be the third biggest SAFE allocation among the member states, even though most of the EU’s regular payments to Hungary are suspended because of rule of law deficiencies and corruption risks.
The Greens in the European Parliament initiated the debate, which has gained the support of mainstream political parties.
“I’m really frustrated that the European Commission chose Hungary as the third largest beneficiary of this whole SAFE programme, which means that Hungary will get €16 billion for its defence industry without any human rights rule of law conditionality,” Greens-EFA MEP Tineke Strik told Euronews.
The debate will take place next Tuesday at the plenary session in Strasbourg, and will not be followed by a resolution.
Treading carefully
MEPs critical of Orbán argue that the EU should impose robust safeguards before transferring the SAFE funds to his government.
The EU has already suspended €17 billion out of €27 billion previously earmarked for Hungary, with payments made conditional on improvements in justice, rule of law and anti-corruption efforts.
EU budget Commissioner Piotr Serafin told the European Parliament last December that the same conditions might be applied to SAFE funds as well, but the 15% down payment could be allocated without conditions.
On Monday, Euronews reported that the European Commission has postponed most upcoming decisions related to Hungary in order to avoid any perception of interference in the current election campaign. But because boosting defence spending is a strategic goal of the von der Leyen Commission, SAFE is an exception.
If approved by the EU Council, the first of the defence payments could happen during the first quarter of this year, just before Hungary’s crucial parliamentary election on April 12.
“This is a huge present to Orbán, because he will get a big part of it before the elections in Hungary,” Strik said. “And because of the lack of conditions, he can use it for his own campaign and sell it as a sign of the legitimacy of his regime.”
“This is really a toxic present for democracy in Hungary.”
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