- Italian airports impose fuel restrictions amid supply shortages until 9 April
- Fidesz accuses Meta of censoring Orbán ahead of Hungary’s elections
- NASA surpasses distance record as Artemis II crew orbits the moon
- What We Know About the F-15 Pilot Who Endured Two Days in Iranian Mountains
- Serbia probes attempted pipeline sabotage amid migrant training suspicions
- Trump signals Iran ceasefire deadline as hostilities continue to escalate
- King Charles and Prince Louis Enjoy Heartwarming Moment at Easter Service
- Colombia mourns siblings who suffocated in freezer during hide-and-seek game
Browsing: featured
“The general impact of climate change on the Philippines is warmer temperatures. The heat that we are experiencing, it could steadily increase in the coming days,” Mr Estareja said.
Australia’s newest budget airline – Bonza – has gone into voluntary administration, after cancelling all of its flights on Tuesday. The airline’s financial difficulties have left thousands of passengers stranded around the country. “We apologise to our customers who are impacted by this and we’re working as quickly as possible to determine a way forward that ensures there is ongoing competition in the Australian aviation market,” Bonza said in a statement.
“The pen drives were kept on bus seats, at bus stands and were given to people in public places like parks,” an official told the daily. “These pen drives had more than 2,000 files which included videos and photos. After a few hours, we saw these being widely shared on WhatsApp.”
The US State Department says five units of the Israeli military are responsible for gross violations of human rights in individual incidents, but the US will continue to send military backing.
Four law enforcement officers have been shot and killed, and four others injured, while serving a warrant in Charlotte, North Carolina, officials say.
Where to Purchase Tickets for Billie Eilish’s Glasgow Concert and her tour in the UK
Columbia University Continues Talks to Dismantle Anti-Israel Encampment Despite No Deal Reached Days after setting a red line for anti-Israel…
Monday’s front pages lead on a variety of stories. Several of the papers cover the UK’s Rwanda policy with different approaches to the story. Elsewhere, the latest from the UK government also makes a couple of the newspapers – with reports that Tory MP rebels are plotting to oust the prime minister ahead of what is expected to be disastrous local elections for the Conservatives.
The back pages lead on Arsenal’s win over Spurs to take them to the top of the Premier League table – the Gunners got off to a great start but Spurs managed to claw a few goals back in what was a nervy end to the match.
Scotland’s first minister Humza Yousaf is set to resign from his role as early as today, the BBC says. The SNP leader is expected to stand down following the collapse of the Bute House Agreement – his party’s power-sharing deal with the Scottish Greens – last week.
Mass rallies have taken place across Australia in response to a wave of recent violence against women. The protesters want gender-based violence to be declared a national emergency and stricter laws put in place to stop it. Aussie PM Anthony Albanese said the issue was a national crisis.
Subscribe to Updates
Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

