The Guardian says Authorities in the Amazon investigating the disappearance of a British journalist and an Indigenous advocate have yet to find any evidence of a crime three days after the men went missing in a remote corner of the rainforest.
Month: June 2022
The Guardian says An 11-year-old survivor of the elementary school massacre in Uvalde, Texas testified before the House oversight committee on Wednesday.
The Guardian says the Scottish government has been urged to “come clean once and for all” about whether it has the power to legislate for a second independence referendum at Holyrood.
The Guardian says The England and Wales water regulator, Ofwat, has unlawfully failed to stop water companies discharging raw sewage into rivers, campaigners say in a legal case.
Sky News says the cost of filling the average family car with petrol is tipped to exceed £100 for the first time, when industry figures are released later on Thursday.
The Guardian says while government ministers are once again focused on saving their own jobs, away from Westminster people are still struggling to stay afloat.
The Independent says the cost of filling up a typical family car with petrol could exceed £100 as soon as Thursday, according to the RAC motoring group.
Several of Thursday’s front pages report ongoing turmoil for the UK economy
Sky News says Boris Johnson will announce new measures to help people to get on to the property ladder during a speech in which he pledges to hard-pressed UK households that “things will get better”.
BBC News says A teacher was killed and 14 schoolchildren were injured after a car hit a crowd on a busy street in the German capital, Berlin.
Euronews says the European Union’s Anti-Fraud office recommended this year that more than €500 million of EU funds be recovered.
Arab News says Shanghai will lock down a district of 2.7 million people on Saturday to conduct mass coronavirus testing, city authorities said, as the Chinese metropolis struggles to fully emerge from punishing curbs.
Arab News says workers pulled scores of bodies from smashed buildings in an “endless caravan of death” inside the devastated city of Mariupol.
TRT World says the US House has voted for a bill that raises the minimum age to purchase a semi-automatic assault rifle in the country from 18 to 21, in an attempt to tackle the mass shooting sprees that has plagued the United States.
BBC Sport says Emma Raducanu is expected to be fit for Wimbledon after a scan showed the injury which forced her to retire at the Nottingham Open was a side strain.
PMQs Today roundup: ‘Powerful attack lines’ aren’t landing In the first PMQs today after the Prime Minister survived a no-confidence vote, it became incredibly heated…
Today in the EU – A round-up of the latest updates from the attack in Berlin. How the protests against Turkey have intensified in Cyprus…
Latest from Berlin today where a man driving a car ploughed into pedestrians killing 1 and injuring 9 in chaos attack. At least one person…
Boris Johnson survived the confidence vote, but only narrowly – so what does the future look like for the PM?
PM Boris Johnson survived the confidence vote, but only narrowly – so how did the UK newspapers react to the news? and what does the future look like for the PM.
The Telegraph says there may not be a clear alternative leader within the party now, but that doesn’t mean one will never emerge.
The Guardian’s editorial says Keir Starmer, you have a golden opportunity. Now try a bit of Corbynism.
The Independent says It is axiomatic that any political leader who faces a vote of confidence is doomed, sooner or later.
Daily Express says BORIS JOHNSON clings onto power, seeing off a plot by rebel Tories to oust him from No10 in what he declared a “convincing result”.
PMQs Live – Northern Ireland protocol, Starmer goes soft on PM