Latest news bulletin | November 28th, 2025 – Midday
Catch up with the most important stories from around Europe and beyond this November 28th, 2025 - latest news, breaking news, World, Business, Entertainment, Politics, Culture, Travel.
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00:00In an interview with Euronews on the morning show Europe Today, EPP Group MEP and former general of the Estonian army Rio Terras said that Trump's 28-point so-called peace plan for Ukraine would decree to Kyiv's capitulation.
00:15The U.S.-backed plan presented last week to Ukraine calls on it to cede the eastern Donbass region to Russia, limits the size of the Ukraine's armed forces to 600,000 and bars Kyiv's from joining NATO.
00:27Well, the Americans believe everything that Putin says.
00:30Oh, what do you mean by that?
00:32I am very surprised that Trump runs like an errand boy for Putin's capitulation plan, which we have seen, 28-point plan, which was a clear Russian plan to make Ukraine to capitulate.
00:47It has nothing to do with the reality and it violated all the international rules and regulations we have had till now.
00:54The MEP agreed with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, who warned in a speech to MEPs on Wednesday that Russia's playbook has not changed, with Ukraine being just the start.
01:05Russia only understands power.
01:08That means what?
01:09It means that we need to get ourselves much more powerful on the military side, we need to act in support of Ukraine, we need to send finances and weapons to Ukraine, we need to show Russia that there's no way that Russia can go further.
01:24Ukraine has called on its partners to allocate 0.25% of their GDP to military support for Ukraine in 2026.
01:33There has agreed that the EU could do more and is already late in providing the necessary financial support for Ukraine.
01:39Countries failed to set a phase-out of fossil fuels at the COP30, and Europe is partly to blame, European lawmakers noted during a plenary debate in Strasbourg on the results of the 30th United Nations Climate Conference held last week in Belem, Brazil.
01:57The final text avoids any roadmap to phase-out coal, gas and oil extraction due to major resistance from oil-producing countries.
02:06We needed a good deal, 10 years after the Paris Agreement, and what did we get instead?
02:12I am sorry, Commissioner, but I think the support for the fossil fuel roadmap was too weak, and we were disorganized in the European Union at the table of the COP.
02:22Or why else would EU countries sign different proposals at different times?
02:27Some MEPs also criticized the President of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, for saying at the G20 in South Africa that the EU was not fighting fossil fuels, only emissions.
02:39Transitioning away from fossil fuels. Europe in Belem was standing behind it, but Europe in South Africa was questioning that maybe we should talk about the emissions of fossil fuels and not fossil fuels themselves.
02:52I really think the coordination within the Commission is not good enough.
02:56What the COP30 participants did agree on was to triple adaptation finance by 2035 in order that developed countries assist developing countries adapting to the impact of climate change.
03:08The European reform of air passenger rights seems to be going from bad to worse.
03:19Dissatisfaction with the draft text has now reached such a level that the industry has called for a pause in the negotiations.
03:25We urgently call for a six-month pause to the deliberations until a thorough impact assessment of the proposed measures has been conducted, it says in a letter sent on behalf of the airline industry operating in Europe.
03:38The current draft text could increase the sector's total annual cost by at least 40% according to various airlines' associations.
03:48Currently, European air travelers are entitled to compensation if a flight is cancelled or delayed by more than three hours.
03:56However, airlines are pushing for the threshold to be raised, which the European Consumer Association rejects.
04:02The first discussions on the Conseil were held on a range of 5 hours and 9 hours, which would have removed 90% of the rights of passengers.
04:09So for us, it was unacceptable.
04:11The final deal was found at 4 hours and 6 hours, which would impact more than 60% of the passengers.
04:15That's to say that 6 people over 10 would have no right to compensation.
04:19For us, it's unacceptable, of course.
04:21Inter-institutional negotiations between the Council, the Parliament and the Commission will resume on Monday.
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06:47What we are able to do here is that we are also able to create a resection plan to simulate
07:02how the tumor can be cut out.
07:07This also allows us to calculate the volume of the liver and also the remnant and the
07:16system.
07:18So what we have learned from the clinicians is that the real value is the spatial feeling
07:25and the understanding of the anatomical structures that you get from looking at it from different
07:32angles, being able to expand it, being able to cut into it with different tools.
07:46Current care is looking at big grey CT imaging, slice after slice after slice and trying
08:02to piece it together.
08:03So you imagine five surgeons trying to plan a complicated case.
08:07They all have different opinions, different ways of thinking about it.
08:11Other ones don't dare to say too much to the professor.
08:14So then you have this very unique opportunity to collaborate and look at the images and expand
08:20the images, go inside the images and actually plan better surgery.
08:24So we have had cases where a surgeon has actually called back a patient who he had decided was
08:39inoperable, sent him home and said we can't do anything for you, had taken our platform and
08:47then he realized that actually he could operate.
08:49So he brought the case back in and the man, as we followed, is alive and well with his children.
08:58The 3D models are put inside to help with navigation and our ultimate goal of course is that a surgeon
09:15would have on a lens and be looking at the patient so the hologram would be overlaid and fixed onto
09:21the body of the patient so you imagine the liver so that it was fixed and you would operate
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