London / Belfast / Edinburgh: Storm Bram Unleashes Winter Fury Across British Isles
A powerful winter storm named Storm Bram battered the United Kingdom and Ireland on December 9. Authorities issued amber and red weather warnings as gale-force winds and heavy rainfall caused widespread flooding, knocked out power to as many as 25,000 homes in Ireland, closed key transport links, and forced cancellation of flights and ferry services. Major roads and rail lines were disrupted, with flood-related rescue operations underway.
The storm’s impact underscored Europe’s increasing vulnerability to extreme weather events in an already tumultuous year.
Prague: Andrej Babiš Appointed Czech Prime Minister, Shift Looms in Central Europe
In Prague, Czech President Petr Pavel appointed Andrej Babiš, leader of the populist ANO party, as the new prime minister after an election victory in October. Babiš’s government is expected to formally take power once his full cabinet is sworn in mid-December.
The appointment marks a potential shift in the Czech Republic’s policy posture, including its stance on European integration and foreign policy, as long-standing pro-EU leadership gives way to a more sceptical populist agenda.
Kyiv: Ukraine Says It Will Soon Present Refined Peace Plan to U.S. Allies
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy declared that Kiev and its European partners would shortly send a “refined peace plan” to the United States, amid ongoing war negotiations. The statement came after recent high-level diplomacy and efforts to shape a framework for ending the conflict with Russia, even as disagreements over terms and territorial questions endure.
The move highlighted continuing efforts to break the deadlock in peace diplomacy even as battlefield contestation persists.
Brussels: EU Weakens Corporate Sustainability Laws After Industry and Member State Pressure
EU governments and the European Parliament reached an agreement to scale back corporate sustainability regulations, easing requirements that had been criticised by business groups and some member states as overly burdensome. The changes reflect a growing tension between Brussels’ regulatory ambitions and the practical pressures of economic competitiveness.
The decision represented a notable retreat from earlier, stricter regulatory goals and pointed to broader debates shaping the EU’s economic policy orientation.
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