After the government control of the government or the British Steel Scunthorpe plant during the weekend, many of the top -hour pages on Monday consider what could happen next. “Blast Chance Saloon” is how the Metro describes the “race against time” of the government to obtain enough raw materials to keep the explosions into operation, after the ministers accused the owners of the plant to sell existing materials and not buy anymore.
Meanwhile, The Times reports that the ministers feared the Chinese owner of the plant, Jingye, planned to “sabotage” the site “to increase the British dependence on cheap Chinese imports.” The document also carries an image, which is seen in several front pages this morning, of the whole life to fly to space later today. Among those who will take off are Katy Perry, singer of the rightly called Track ET, and Lauren Sánchez, journalist and fiancee of the owner of the Space firm of blue origin Jeff Bezos.
Article I informs that Chinese companies “can be blocked” from the critical sites of the United Kingdom after the steel drama of the weekends. He says that Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds, who previously said Jingye did not negotiate “in good faith” about the future of the plant, recognizes that there is now a “trusted bar” to allow such companies to invest in critical British industries.
“The rivals join the race against time” to keep the high ovens in Scunthorpe in operation, read the head of The Guardian, since it reports that British steel managers are considering offers of raw materials of two companies. In other news, the retirers Cambridge rowers are shown after ensuring a double victory over Oxford in Sunday’s boat race.
However, “The Smiling Assassin” is the headline that splashed the sun this morning. He reports that Hashem Abedi was “smiling” when he attacked three prison officers on Saturday, with unidentified sources who called their survival as a “miracle.” The anti -terrorist police continue to investigate Abedi’s attack, who is one of the men responsible for the Manchester Arena bombardment.
The Daily Mirror also leads to the attack, and asks why Abedi had access to the “boiling oil” he threw on the officers. The prison staff asks for “fast action” to protect them after the attack, reports the newspaper. Both the mirror and the sun, Mickey Rourke’s departure from Celebrity Big Brother about what Itv called his “unacceptable behavior.”
“Time to stop ‘appeased’ extremists in our prisons”: this is the warning of the conservative justice spokesman Robert Jenrick after the incident, according to the Daily Mail. “The parliamentarians say that enough is enough,” adds the role.
Meanwhile, the Daily Telegraph leads the “desperate movement” of the government to call military planners to help deal with birmingham assembly garbage in the middle of a one -month -old container strike. The decision “runs the risk of inflaming tensions between work and unions,” reports the document. Its cover also covers a new report by parliamentarians who says that Southport’s disturbances were fed by “police silence.”
The Financial Times has an international vision of things this morning. He informs about a Russian attack that killed more than 34 people in the city of Sumy of Ukraine, and points out that he arrived less than a day after the American envoy Steve Witkoff with the president of Russia, Putin. It also addresses the rates of the president of the United States Trump once again, and reports that the exemption of large technological products such as smartphones “will only be a letter,” according to the United States Secretary of Commerce.
The conservative leader Kemi Badenoch gives his opinion on tariffs on the cover of The Daily Express. “It’s time to buy British” to protect companies in the United Kingdom from the economic policy of the president of the United States, as well as “employment tax that punishes”, according to the document. His cover also presents an image of an explosion of the house in Nottinghamshire, who killed a man and destroyed several properties.
In a change of rhythm, “Easter Brollydays” is the head of the Daily Star on Monday, since it warns that a storm will arrive this week. These are “No news of egg cells”, regrets the paper.
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