The United Kingdom should abandon the intention to send thousands of soldiers to Ukraine because the risks are “too high,” reports the Times. The newspaper says that it is hoped that a change in Britain and the EU in military support in Ukraine could lead to the movement of its red lines to conclude a peace agreement. Times also indicates that the United Kingdom is open to a mobility scheme for young people “One in, One Out” with the EU.
The Daily Telegraph directs its Ukrainian coverage with “Starmer defies the Trump peace plan” while Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer continues his support for President Volodymyr Zelensky after the United States proposed a peace agreement that strongly favored Russia. Also winning a first location is a story that unemployed young people “will not work for less than 40k”.
“Vladimir, stop!” Dominates the Guardian’s first page as it reports to the rare reprimands of the Russian President of Donald Trump after Moscow launched a deadly air strike that killed 12 people in kyiv. The cashmere attack is also important, as fears grow, it could “push India and Pakistan closer to war”.
The Financial Times leads with “Trump tells Putin to stop”, illustrating the last strike of Russia on Ukraine with a photo of a fire ball and plumes of smoke from damaged infrastructure. At the same time, a message from China to the White House to “cancel all unilateral prices” shows Beijing’s hardened position on Trump’s pricing diet.
The SUN reports that a group of “raking it inn” hotels after being paid 700 million pounds sterling per year by taxpayers to provide accommodation to asylum seekers. Florence Pugh’s “Premiere Robbery” also shared the first page after masked thieves made a descent into the star’s van after the first of her new Thunderbolts film.
“The new online safety rules will leave children in danger” “declares the Daily Mail while activists say that the long-awaited rules of Ofcom have not gone far enough to protect young people. The look of the first of the Thunderbolts of Florence Pugh is also hailed as” Leather Marvel-Louse “.
The Daily Mirror calls to “Justice for Jill”, urging police to launch an examination of Jill Dando’s murder case after the newspaper said he found new evidence. A story on the fathers of the victims of Southport and their mission to run “for our little girls”.
The dads of the Southport victims who run the London marathon in memory also take first place in the Daily Express. The two fathers will pay tribute to their daughters, saying that they “will always be with us”.
Metro’s first page criticizes the new online security rules as a “lost chance of preventing technological companies from killing our children”. The rules are accused of having first placed “reckless” technological companies.
Paper I records a victory in their campaign to save the British rivers as a new law will guarantee that “the polluting water owners in front of the prison for having covered the spills of wastewater”.
“Poo are you?” Ask the Daily Star as the football bosses chase a person who left a “unpleasant surprise” in the shoe of a referee. The incident worthy of a red card has abandoned a lower league match. “Foul” indeed.
Several first pages reflect the situation in Ukraine and attempts to conclude a peace agreement with Russia. The Financial Times has a photograph of a ballistic missile exploding in kyiv during an attack on Thursday which killed at least 12 people. The Guardian shows the consequences of the strikes, with the image of a woman covered with blood saved from an apartment block. President Trump’s words, “Vladimir, stop!” Include part of the newspaper’s title.
Addressing the Daily Telegraph, the Prime Minister says that negotiations to end the fighting is at an “intense stadium”. But in what the document describes as a “challenge” to the position of Donald Trump, Sir Keir Starmer insisted that Ukraine was authorized to decide on the terms of any peace agreement with Russia. According to Times, any agreement will not imply thousands of British troops in Ukraine because the risks have been described by a source as “too high”.
The Daily Mail is one of the articles to report on the “massive” security operation before the funeral of Pope Francis tomorrow. The army anti-drone units will join police officers with machine guns patrolling the road to the funeral procession. The Daily Express indicates that a “steel ring” has been set up, the sought -after mourning people and the elite shooters taking positions on the roof.
Under the title, “Welcome to the … raking it inn”, the Sun reports that a chain of hotels was paid 700 million pounds sterling in one year to house asylum seekers. The accounts of the Belvedere stay hotels for the 12 months to September 2022 show that it made a profit before tax of 62.6 million pounds sterling. A source of labor indicates that changes have been made to save billions of taxpayers.
“Justice for Jill” The Daily Mirror asks that he reports calls to a police examination on the murder of the former BBC presenter Jill Dando, in 1999. The newspaper indicates that he found new evidence connecting someone whom he describes as a “merciless Serbian assassin” to the case. Scotland Yard says that no unresolved murder is never closed and that detectives are considering new information.