Several pages of Sunday focused on the knife of Southport, a few days after a government review, it was found that the anti-terrorism scheme “Premature” killed three years before the killing of three children in Southport. His case was closed. The Sun “Southport Hero” talks to Joel Verit, who faced the attacker, and his interview generates a hectrinding headline with “Horror Will with Me Forever”.
Sunday Times also led an interview on Southport Stabing, but with the parents of two children killed that day, Elsi.com Stancomb and Babe King. Paper says that parents interviewed for three hours so that “people remember their girls for their personality”. Babe’s father described her as “so confident and full of life”, and Elsey’s mother says that her daughter was “really” in a way.
Because interviewing with a newspaper is such a big step for families, the traditional media rivalry is kept separate as other papers report in the Sunday Times interview. Sunday mirror gives most of its front page to the pictures of Elsey Dot and Babe with the headline “our angels”.
Sunday people take a similar approach, but limits its main title to the same word – “angels”.
The Sunday Express also highlighted the same interview, raising the quotation from Babe’s mother that she is still “looking for light in the dark”. However, on its front page more prominently, there is a call from top conservators to leader Kemi Badenocch. Major members are calling him to “save” the UK, writes paper, by creating a “election treaty” with Nigel Faraj’s reform party.
Meanwhile, The Sunday Telegraph reported on Health Minister Andrew Gin, who writes paper, “Pensioner should die, was dismissed to say”. Gin on Saturday issued a statement apologizing for “any crime” and said he understood the PM’s decision. In addition, the paper jumps on the other side of the pond as it writes that US President Donald Trump said “extinguish” Rajkumar Harry – calling his wife, Meghan, “terrible”.
Both stories have also taken top slots on the front page of the mail on Sunday, describing the Prime Minister as “surrounded”, while Gwen is dramatically extinguished. Covering Trump’s comments on the royal couple, the paper shares an image of dukes and duchess and holds the President’s comments on the cloud front and center.
Compared to other papers, focusing a different focus, with the plan of Observer Labor “to fix the profit system” to bring back to work “. The rules of profit are considered “redrawn”, the paper understands, “in a radical overhaul to cut the cost of welfare. Separately, it also shows the image of a small Palestinian girl dressed in red and is coming up to the waist of Hamas fighters carrying the gun, who stood during the handover of three Israeli hostages on Saturday.
The coldest February for six years? This may be the case, the Daily Star writes on his front page, as it says that the cold season may remain around till March. “Brrrrrilliant” – it writes.