There are many stories on Saturday’s front pages. Financial Times proceeds with the news that pharmaceutical giant Astrazheneka has “canceled the £ 450M manufacturing plant in the UK” after months of months on the state support for the project. Paper says that the Prime Minister Sir Kir Stmper wanted to reduce £ 90M in public money which was promised by the previous government. It said that this news has dealt with the “shock for the government’s development agenda”, saying that the plant “was going to help the next generation to make flu vaccines and the flexibility of the UK against future pandemics. “.
I report that 57% of the UK voters return a youth dynamics scheme that will allow the under -30 to stay and work in the European Union, with just 14% against. It says that half is also in favor of close trade relations with the European Union compared to 33% with the European Union, although it is said that the European conference has doubts about the UK membership of the European Conference on human rights.
Writing for the Daily Express to mark the fifth anniversary of Brexit, Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch accused Sir Keir that “Tie Britain in the red tape of the European Union, to remove the rights of fishing and the movement of people Returned to freedom. She pledges to “respect the wishes of the British”, saying: “I am committed to fighting my freedom and fighting Brexit”.
According to the Times, the benefits of long -term disease will need to work to work and their benefits can be seen as part of the “overhaul” of the welfare employed by ministers. Paper says that work and pension secretary Liz Kendal wants to encourage people to work to “control a balloon welfare bill”. In an interview for paper, former Prime Minister Sir Tony Blair argues that a digital ID system and facial recognition cameras can help deal with crime and illegal immigration – and in this process help the opponents of localism to defeat it. Are.
The Daily Telegraph quoted US President Donald Trump, saying that he would “exactly” impose trade tariffs on the European Union and “treat us so badly”. Trump has already announced 25% tariffs on the goods coming from neighboring Mexico and Canada to the US and also has 10% tariffs on China. Paper states that measures have inspired “a global trade war and inflation crisis”.
According to the Daily Star, Trump has a “a new gold crowd”, as American investors have “snatched all of the British bullion” the possibility of tariff.
Daily Mail says that Prince Andrew “faces fresh pressure”. After this emergence he e-mail Jeffrey Epstein that he said that both of them “will play some more soon” weeks later, he claimed that he has claimed that he has a pedophile financier Relationships have been cut. Paper told Epstein to “keep” in close touch “and said that the message, which came out in the court documents, suggests that” Andrew would lie in his notorious newsnight interview “.
And the Guardian Gaza, Malak, carries a piece from his reporter at Tantesh, who was one of the thousands capable of returning to his homes in North Gaza this week after the ceasefire deal. She describes a tedious walk for the city of Gaza, it used to walk through most of the water, and through the “a ghost city” that used to be a “fancy enclave for the rich of the city”. To reach her family home, she writes: “Only one thing was still standing, a walnut tree tights, and some olive trees that used to be in our yard. Our house was a three -storey building. , And the levels collapsed like layers in a cake above each other.