
The Daily Mail is upset by the decision of the justice secretary to block the minutes of the cabinet discussions on Iraq.
The paper reports that he faced a storm of protest last night after he used a clause in freedom of information law to prevent publication of minutes of two key Cabinet meetings in 2003.
The Guardian reports that one of the architects of the government's national security strategy has warned that privacy rights of innocent people will have to be sacrificed to give the security services access to a sweeping range of personal data.
Meanwhile the Independent's front page claims that senior Army officers have told the paper that British soldiers are engaged in "a surreal mini civil war" with growing numbers of home-grown jihadists who have travelled to Afghanistan to support the Taliban.
The Telegraph reports that last month saw savers withdraw a record £2.3 billion from their accounts as historically low interest rates forced millions of investors to look elsewhere for better returns on their money.
The Times looks at the latest problems for the train companies again inflation related as they are to be forced to cut the price of season tickets and off-peak fares for the first time since privatisation.
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