EU leaders met in Brussels on Thursday after the announcement of a peace deal brokered by Ukraine, Russia, France and Germany.<br /><br /> The meeting had initially planned to focus on tackling terrorism after the Charlie Hebdo attacks.<br /><br /> But recent events mean heads of state and government discussed the Ukraine crisis and the Greek bailout.<br /><br /> It is not an formal EU summit, so there were no concrete decisions taken.<br /><br /> The talks come after eurozone finance ministers failed to strike a deal on Wednesday.<br /><br /> Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras said he hoped the EU could “find a mutually viable solution, in order to heel the wounds of austerity, to tackle the humanitarian crisis across the European Union and to bring Europe back to the road of growth”.<br /><br /> But it is not only Germany which opposed relaxing the bailout terms for Athens.<br /><br /> Other northern European countries such as Finland were equally sceptical.<br /><br /> Finnish Prime Minister Alex Stubb said Greece was “back at square one” after years of EU ef
