The global reaction to Donald Trump and at the top of Alaska from Vladimir Putin is prominently in the Sunday newspapers. The Sunday Times leads with more details of the meeting, reporting that Putin proposed to freeze the front lines in two Ukrainian provinces if the kyiv troops withdraw from the Donbas region. The newspaper also previewed President Volodymyr Zelensky going to the White House on Monday to meet Trump.
The Sunday Telegraph follows with its coverage of “Putin’s Land Grab”, reporting that Trump “is inclined to support” Putin demand that Ukraine makes the Donetsk region rich in minerals in Russia in order to end the war. Elsewhere, the newspaper says that the Labor Party has renewed its “war against motorists” by abandoning plans to limit new districts with low traffic and 20 MPH hour areas. The telegraph says that the conservatives called the movement “a kick in the teeth towards motorists”.
Zelensky is “trapped in Trump and Putin Vice,” said the mail on Sunday. The newspaper says the world leaders fear that the Ukrainian president will be forced to give up the sides of his homeland for a “fragile peace” at his meeting on Monday with Trump. Elsewhere, the paper highlights former Prime Minister Boris Johnson in the Alaska meeting as “the most vomited summit in diplomatic history”.
An expert warning that the world is in “serious danger if west serious in Putin” is looming in the Sunday Express. The newspaper quotes experts in foreign policy who say that the United Kingdom and Europe are at risk of “failing the greatest security challenge” since the Second World War. That said, criticism fear that Trump’s breed concludes a peace agreement “will reward Russia and put other nations at risk of invasion”.
The Sunday mirror splashes the former Labor leader Neil Kinnock calling on the government to “remove the cap with two children” to raise “60,000 children of poverty”. In an interview with the newspaper, Kinnock also says that the conservatives have left the country in a state of difficulty which “would make Charles Dickens furious”.
The observer presents an editorial of the secretary at the Yvette Cooper, in which she again defends the proscription of the action of Palestine as a terrorist group. She says that it is more than just “regular protest group known for occasional waterfalls”.
The sun leads the BBC probe on strictly come Dancing. The newspaper indicates that the broadcaster brought the police to investigate the allegations concerning the show. The BBC did not comment on developments. BBC News approached the MET police to comment.
Finally, the Daily Star issues a warning of the “gulls of blonde beer”, saying that the drunken and rowdy seagulls have pulled out pints in parks and “picking fights with binmen”. The newspaper says that birds become aggressive after lowering drinks thrown by people in the parks and on the beaches. Thus, holders are wary of a visit to these “beer -winged psychos”.
The Sunday telegraph leads on the benefits of the summit of Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin in Alaska. “Trump maintains that Putin’s Land Grab” reads the title of the newspaper. The mail Sunday indicates that the future of Ukraine as a sovereign nation is at stake with its title, “Zelensky trapped in Trump and Putin Vice”. Express Sunday quotes the former defense secretary, Sir Grant Shapps, saying that Ukraine risks being forced to what it called “a hollow agreement”.
The former HMP Wandsworth security chief in London had secret relations with organized criminals, according to the Sunday Times. An investigation by the newspaper says Bobby Cunningham met an alleged cocaine trafficker at home and has been the subject of reports of denunciation after transferring serious criminals to more indulgent prisons. The newspaper indicates that the 34 -year -old man was authorized to resign for medical reasons before being dismissed and receiving compensation of around £ 160,000. Mr. Cunningham – who did not respond to the request for Times comments – was forced to reimburse the money. The prisons service told the newspaper that he does not hesitate to take action when staff members fall below his standards.
Former labor head, Neil Kinnock, called for the rebuilding of the two -children’s profit, according to the first page of the Sunday Mirror. In an interview, he called for a tax on wealth on the upper percent of employees, which, according to him, raised 600,000 children of poverty.
The SUN Sunday says that the BBC called the police as part of a strictly Come Dancing investigation, in what the newspaper calls “its greatest crisis”. He quotes a spokesperson for the metropolitan police, who says that “the investigation is at its beginnings”. We do not know what he relates to. The BBC says that it does not comment on police investigations.
Sunday’s mail indicates that researchers in the United States use artificial intelligence to identify the exact due date of pregnant women. The newspaper indicates that only 4% of babies are born on their due date in the United Kingdom. The IA tool – which was developed and formed using more than two million ultrasound images – was 92%precise, according to the report.