Russia and Ukraine are reportedly ready to agree a temporary ceasefire in the Black Sea and with regard to energy infrastructure. The US announced that under the deal the two sides will refrain from attacks on ships and that Washington would comply with Russia's precondition that sanctions on grain and fertiliser exports be eased. Many details remain unclear, commentators emphasise.

Trump is negotiating with Putin on the war in Ukraine and Nato is in an existential crisis as a result of current US policy. The new situation has triggered a lively discussion about rearmament, joint defence and continued support for Kyiv. Europe's media examine the fundamental requirements for a new security model and the problems it poses.

The British Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rachel Reeves, is due to make her Spring Statement on the economic situation tomorrow. She is expected to announce major cuts to social welfare budget to reduce the national debt. Commentators in the national press take differing views of the plan.

New negotiations on a ceasefire in the war against Ukraine have begun in Saudi Arabia, which are being conducted in a form of shuttle diplomacy: negotiators from Ukraine and the US met first, with a meeting of Russian and US representatives planned next. The talks were constructive and informative, explained Ukrainian Defence Minister Rustem Umerov.

London's Heathrow Airport - the busiest in Europe - was brought to a standstill for the whole of Friday due to a power outage caused by a fire at a nearby electricity substation. Around 1,300 flights and 200,000 passengers were affected by the shutdown. British commentators draw different conclusions after the blackout.

Despite a ban on public gatherings, thousands protested in Istanbul on Thursday against the arrest of the city's mayor Ekrem İmamoğlu and the revocation of his university degree. They see these moves as an attempt by President Erdoğan to eliminate his most dangerous rival. The opposition CHP has said that it will nonetheless designate İmamoğlu as its 2028 presidential candidate - for which a university degree is a prerequisite - on Sunday.

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