
The Times carries a warning on the economy.The paper reports that Charles Bean,the Bank of England’s Deputy Governor, warned yesterday that the recession could be even worse than it suggested less than a week ago.
According to the Guardian Peter Mandelson will warn his party not to raise false media and public expectations of instant results, adding the end of the recession simply cannot be forecast.
It leads with the news that a policy governing the interrogation of terrorism suspects in Pakistan that led to British citizens and residents being tortured was devised by MI5 lawyers and figures in government,
The Telegraph is concerned with security at home.It carries the story that Dame Stella Rimington, the former head of MI5, has warned that the fear of terrorism is being exploited by the Government to erode civil liberties and risks creating a police state.
Security under the ocean makes the Independent's lead.Under the headline,So, Admiral, what have you got to say about the nuclear submarine crash?,the paper reports that Defence chiefs are facing an inquiry into the safety of the United Kingdom's nuclear deterrent after British and French submarines, each laden with missiles powerful enough for 1,248 Hiroshima bombings, collided while submerged in the mid-Atlantic.
The Mail is appalled at the sentence on the lorry driver who killed a family of six on the motorway last autumn.It says that the justice system has been condemned as a circus after relatives of a family killed in a road crash by a foreign lorry driver were told he will be free in a year.
Two months for each life says the Mirror,reporting that Paulo Da Silva will serve two months for each of his victims - David and Michelle Statham and their children Reece, 13, Jay, nine, Mason, 20 months, and 10-week-old baby Ellouise.
Jade Goody continues to dominate the red tops,the Sun reports that she is vowing to summon every last ounce of her remaining strength to walk down the aisle with her groom — in a church wedding.
No comments:
Post a Comment