Peace talks in Ukraine are back in the first pages in the midst of the reports of a controversial proposal to end the fighting. Donald Trump will allow Vladimir Putin to keep almost all the territories he has seized from Ukraine under the terms of a proposed peace agreement, reports the Daily Telegraph. The proposal of seven points, which would see the United States officially recognize Russian sovereignty on Crimea and freeze the current front line, would also leave Ukraine without guarantee of clear American security. The Pope’s death continues to also appear, after Francis’ body was posed in the state in the Vatican. Such an image adorns the front of the telegraph, alongside the title “in death, as in life, the pope promotes simplicity”.
Putin’s reported offer to end the Ukraine War through the current front line is splashed on the first page of the Financial Times. “There is a lot of pressure on kyiv at the moment to abandon things so that Trump can win the victory,” an anonymous European official told the newspaper. Also on the front page, the attacks of the American president against the president of the federal reserve Jay Powell sent $ 3,500 (£ 2,620) by an OCE Troy for the first time, reports the newspaper.
Trump’s prices are again among the best stories, because the International Monetary Fund (IMF) makes its verdict on how the world economy will be affected by commercial measures. The Washington -based IMF said that the American president’s levies had sparked a “major negative shock” in the world economy, according to The Guardian. Forecasts for the United States, the United Kingdom and Global Growth have been reduced, uncertainty should lead to “significant slowdown in short-term global growth”. The latest series of peace talks in Ukraine is also on the front page, the United Kingdom welcoming American and European negotiators on Wednesday. Its main image, on the other hand, is that which appears on a certain number of first pages – the body of Pope Francis exhibited in a chapel of the Vatican.
Sir Keir Starmer “owes excuses to so many women,” said Kemi Badenoch, with the Daily Mail leading to the Prime Minister’s response to the Biological Decision of the Supreme Court last week. Sir Keir does not think that transgender women are women, his official spokesperson said on Tuesday, after the Court of the Head ruled that a woman had been defined by biological sex under equality law. The conservative chief told the newspaper that the Prime Minister should say sorry to those who had lost jobs or had been harassed in the row.
According to the Times, which reports that the British zero ambitions have undergone a setback, which reports that solar panels linked to the workforce of Chinese slaves will not be used by the British state company GB Energy. Ed Miliband, the Minister of Energy, will present an amendment to legislation which will oblige the company to ensure that “slavery and the trafficking of human beings do not take place” in his supply chain. Critics say that change will slow down the deployment of solar energy.
The Pope’s death dominates the first page of the daily mirror. Francis is “in the arms of God,” said the newspaper alongside an image of the deceased pontiff lying in condition. He also reports that Prince William will attend the funeral of the Vatican city on Saturday.
“The instant bag for bad cops” is splashed through the metro, which reports that the police who fail to verify can be automatically dismissed from next month. The change of law comes after a series of catastrophic cases left the women at the mercy of the thugs officers, notes the newspaper, in reference to scandals such as the condemnation of Wayne Couzens, which removed, raped and murdered Sarah Everard in 2021.
The interview with Gary Lineker with Amol Rajan de la BBC is the first story of the Daily Star first page. “Beeb’s bosses gave me a red card,” said the newspaper, after the day’s presenter’s match, said he thought that the company wanted him to leave the show when he was negotiating a new contract last year.
There is a “dashboard for cash ISAS”, IS paper reports, with savers rushing to lock the best prices in the middle of rumors that Chancellor Rachel Reeves will soon deploy reforms. A large investment company declared an increase of 84% of the money paid in the ISA compared to last April.
Reeves was informed that she could not blame Mr. Trump’s prices for the growth of growth of Great Britain, reports the Daily Express. The IMF has reduced its economic growth forecasts for the United Kingdom by 1.6% to 1.1% this year. But experts say that the Chancellor cannot assign economic problems to the samples of the American president, according to the newspaper.
“It’s a kind of tragic,” said the sun on his first page, saying that Freddie Mercury’s sister secretly spent 3 million pounds sterling to buy the souvenirs of the singer queen – after being auctioned by her ex -girlfriend. The newspaper says that Cachemira Bulsara bought the items sold by Mary Austin because she thought they should stay in the family.
“Trump to let Putin keep the land seized,” said the daily telegraph on his first page. The newspaper indicates that the request is part of a plan of seven points to try to end the war in Ukraine which will be discussed Wednesday in London. According to the Financial Times, Vladimir Putin proposed to stop the invasion along the current front lines. The Financial Times describes the proposal as the “first formal indication” of Putin that Russia could retreat from its “maximalist requirements”.
Many first -year pages have images of Pope Francis in a coffin open in the Vatican. “In the arms of God,” said the daily mirror. The Guardian reports that his funeral will start local time at 10:00 am (9:00 a.m. BST) on Saturday and that she will be led by Giovanni Battista Re, the dean of the Cardinals College. The list of guests for funeral includes American President Donald Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky – with document I focused on the “intense diplomatic challenge” to offer a seats plan.
“The PM owes excuses to so many women” is the message of conservative leader Kemi Badenoch in the Daily Mail. Sir Keir Starmer had previously declared that he had abandoned his conviction that transgender women are women, in the light of the Supreme Court decision on gender. The editorial of the Times claims that the Prime Minister dealt with the question “badly” while the column of the leader of the telegraph accuses him of hypocrisy “.
The Guardian reports an “austere evaluation” of the world economy by the International Monetary Fund (IMF). The United Kingdom is expected to grow 1.1% this year, compared to 1.6% scheduled for January. The Daily Express says that the government cannot blame Trump, describing the chancellor’s “tax raid” on employers as an “act of economic vandalism”.
And under the title “It is a kind of tragic”, the sun says that Freddie Mercury’s sister secretly spent 3 million pounds sterling by buying queen memories after he was sold by his ex-girlfriend. The batches included a Wurlitzer juke box and a vest worn in a video clip. The Bulsara cashmere would be “furious” during the sale, believing that the items should stay in the family.