
Differing headlines this morning across the papers.
The Guardian continues to focus on the situation in Iran as it reports that
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, last night dismissed protests over last week's election as the work of "tension seekers" following a fourth day of protests in Tehran, and appeared to rule out any change to the outcome of the poll by referring to Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as the "elected president".
Iraq is the main topic in the Indy which reports that senior military and intelligence officers have condemned Gordon Brown's decision to hold the Iraq war inquiry in secret, warning that it looks like a cover-up.
The Times focuses on the main conroversy in yesterday's digital Britain report
Households and businesses will have to pay a £6-a-year tax per landline telephone under proposals to extend internet access across the country.
As does the Express which says that
the shock fee last night prompted a furious response from critics who called it a tax on virtually every home in the country.adding
And it is likely to anger the millions of customers who already pay high monthly fees for broadband access.
The Sun's front page reports how
THE Attorney General's decision to back the paltry sentences handed to Baby P's torturers was met with sorrow and fury yesterday - with one critic branding it "beyond diabolical".
The Mail returns to one of its pet subjects as it reports that householders are rising up in rebellion against the scourge of the wheelie bin.
Protesters say the bins blight their streets, warning council chiefs: 'Not in my front yard.'
Whilst the Telegraph returns to the subjcet of MP's expenses as it reports how a millionaire Conservative MP broke parliamentary rules by claiming more than £50,000 in taxpayer-funded expenses to rent a flat from his own company.
Brian Binley claimed £1,500 a month to rent the flat for more than three years, despite House of Commons rules forbidding MPs from renting properties from themselves or their companies.
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