ITN World News for Public Television is broadcast each week night on 48 stations nationwide, carried by 23 out of the top 30 US television markets Watch it live here at 22:30GMT Tell us what you think about World News Warning: Intermittent problems with G2 server beyond ITN Online's control may cause G2 version to fail. Read Daljit's live chat from 23.12.98 Download free G2 player Add channel to your RealPlayer Headlines Nato hit Milosevic's home Nato has taken the war in the Balkans to the Yugoslav leadership, targetting the official residence of President Slobdan Milosevic. The President was not at home when Nato jets attacked with three laser-guided missiles, destroying his home in an expensive suburb of Belgrade. Pressed by reporters, a Pentagon spokesman said the residence was a legitimate military target and denied it was an attempt to assassinate the Yugoslav leader. But Yugoslavia insisted it was. President Milosevic has gaven his first interview, to an American academic, since the airstrikes began. Controversy over ground troops In Washington, the public message was that ground troops would only be sent into Kosovo when it was " appropriate and safe to do so." NATO has been criticised for saying before the air campaign that ground troops weren't an option. Military analysts said it indicated to the Serbs that there wasn't an appetite for a lengthy conflict. Today the British Prime Minister pushed the idea of ground troops in a meeting with President Clinton. To consider the options, here's our Defence correspondent, Kevin Dunn. Nato leaders' strategy meeting Leaders of the western alliance started to convene in Washington today, as the debate over ground troops continued. Nato's Secretary General, Havier Solana said that contingency plans for ground forces were being discussed. But the French and Italian governments said their deployment wasn't "even on the agenda". Regugees trapped in no-man's land The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees has warned there will be a "disaster" if Europe does not take some of the thousands of people who have fled the conflict, and are now stuck on the border with Macedonia. Our correspondent Tim Ewart reports now from the camp at Stenkovic, where thousands of people who are desperate to cross over from Kosovo are still trapped in no-man's land. Investigating war crimes One of the most disturbing developments of the war in Kosovo has been the numerous reports of women being raped and abused by Serbian soldiers. International investigators are now gathering evidence from refugees, evidence which could lead to prosecutions for war crimes. Andrea Catherwood has followed one American investigator as she gathers her testimony from camps in northern Albania. Parents apologise for massacre The parents of the two teenagers who killed 13 people at Columbine High and then committed suicide, have today apologised for their sons actions. The mother and father of Dylan Kleebold said, like the rest of America, they were struggling to understand why their son did what he did. It was revealed that Kleebold, and Eric Harris, made a video months earlier pretending to shoot their schoolmates. Police investigating the massacre are looking into whether the two boys had help or backup from accomplices. Sixteen people are still being treated in hospital - 11 are described as being in a 'critical or serious' condition. The dark side of US youth culture Americans are still trying to come to terms with the massacre at Littleton. Both Kleebold and Harris were from comfortable suburban backgrounds, leading supposedly normal lives. But what is emerging now is a picture of two misfits, who worshipped Adolf Hitler and were obsessed by extreme right-wing beliefs. Peter Morgan has this report on the darker side of American adolescence. Caribbean riot over taxes Six people have been killed in riots on the Caribbean island of Jamaica where hundreds of tourists have been told to stay in their hotels to avoid getting caught up in the violence. The trouble was sparked by a 25 per cent hike in the price of fuel, and car taxes. Jamaica's Prime Minister hinted he might back down over the increases. Students protest for better education At least one student has died in Nicaragua after demonstrations demanding more money for higher education. The protests turned into riots after clashes with police. The student was allegedly killed by a rubber bullet. As Louise Bates reports, at one point a group of students took over the central bank in the capital, Managua. Hope for one of conflict's victims One young Kosovar refugee - Memet Krasnichi - faced a bleak future after his face was badly burned, and his family killed after their convoy was attacked. Now, his injuries partly healed, he has set off for safety, away from the conflict. Our senior correspondent, Mark Austin saw him leave.