
A damning message from the streets says the Mail this morning as the killer of the schoolboy Jimmy Mizzen is sentanced to life imprisonment.
Barry and Margaret Mizen refused yesterday to be infected by the rage which cost 16-year-old Jimmy his life.
Instead they made a heartfelt plea for Britain to stop itself becoming a country of ‘selfishness, anger and fear’.
Meanwhile the Independent reports that
Two hundred schoolchildren in Britain, some as young as 13, have been identified as potential terrorists by a police scheme that aims to spot youngsters who are "vulnerable" to Islamic radicalisation.
The claims come from Sir Norman Bettison, the chief constable of West Yorkshire Police and Britain's most senior officer in charge of terror prevention.
Terrorism is on the front of the Telegraph too,the paper reports that MI5 and MI6 have identified at least 15 cases of possible complicity by British officers in the torture or mistreatment of terror suspects.
The Express claims that interest rates are set to soar.It quotes the words of Spencer Dale ,a member of the Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee, whotold insurers the Bank would remain focused on inflation, regardless of the pain that would cause millions of home owners as their mortgage payments soared.
The Times has another warning on the economy,this time from George Soros who says that Britain may have to go to the IMF for a huge financial bailout.The paper adds
He also warned that next week’s G20 summit in London was the last chance to avert a full-scale depression that could prove worse than that in the 1930s.
The Guardian reports that the equalities watchdog is in disarray this weekend as a fourth senior official threatened to resign, citing growing "anxiety" over the organisation's direction.
Speaking at the end of a week in which three high-level figures announced their departure, Sir Bert Massie said he too was considering his position. The former chairman of the Disability Rights Commission, and one of the 16 commissioners who run the Equalities and Human Rights Commission (EHRC), he sent a written warning to colleagues, which was read out at a board meeting on Thursday, expressing concern at the performance of the watchdog.
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