The United Kingdom is likely to leave the plans to send thousands of troops to Ukraine, since the risks are “too high,” reports the Times. The newspaper says that Britain and the EU are expected to in military support to Ukraine can make Moscow move its red lines to achieve a peace agreement. The Times also points out that the United Kingdom is open to a youth mobility scheme “one in, one outside” with the EU.
The Daily Telegraph leads its Ukraine coverage with “Starmer Trump Peace Plan” Challenges while Prime Minister Sir Starmer continues his support for President Volodyymyr Zenskyy after the United States proposes a peace agreement that favored Russia. Also winning an upper slot is a story that unemployed young people “will not work for less than 40k.”
“Vladimir, hold!” The guardian of the Guardian dominates, since he informs about the rare reprimand of the president of the United States, Donald Trump, of the Russian president after Moscow launched a deadly air strike that killed 12 people in kyiv. The Kashmir attack is also prominent, as fears grow, it could “push India and Pakistan closer to war.”
The Financial Times leads with “Trump tells Putin to stop,” that illustrates Russia’s last attack on Ukraine with a photo of a fireball and smoke feathers due to damaged infrastructure. Together with China’s message to the White House to “cancel all unilateral rates” shows Beijing’s hardened position on Trump’s tariff regime.
The SUN reports that a hotel group is “raking the inn” after taxpayers paid £ 700 million a year to provide homes to asylum seekers. Florence Pugh’s “robbery premiere” also shared the cover after the masked thieves assaulted the stars after the premiere of his new Thunderbolts movie.
The “new online safety rules” will leave children in danger “” The Daily Mail declares since activists say that the long -awaited Rules of ofcom were not far enough to protect young people. The premiere look of Florence Pugh Thunderbolts is also acclaimed as “Marvel-Lous in Leather.”
The Daily Mirror is asking for “Justice for Jill”, urging the police to launch a review of the Jill murder case giving after the newspaper says he found new evidence. There is also a story about the parents of the victims of Southport and their mission of running “for our girls.”
The parents of the Southport victims who run the London Marathon in their memory also play first place in the Daily Express. The two parents will pay tribute to their daughters, saying that “they will always be with us.”
The cover of subros criticizes the new online safety rules as a “lost opportunity to prevent technology companies from killing our children.” The rules are being accused of first putting “recsas” technology companies.
I Paper records a victory in his campaign to save the rivers of Great Britain, since a new law will guarantee that “polluting chiefs finally face prison for covering wastewater spills.”
“Is the poop?” He asks the Daily Star while the soccer bosses are looking for a person who left an “unpleasant surprise” in the shoe of a referee. The incident worthy of the red card caused a match of the lower league to be abandoned. “Missing” in fact.
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