Daily Mirror - You can end this cruelty now … what’s stopping you?

Summary of the front page

The Daily Mirror reports that murdered Sabina Nessa’s sister has urged Dominic Raab to stop killers snubbing sentence hearings after Thomas Cashman refused to attend his last week over the murder of nine-year-old Olivia Pratt-Korbel.

Jabina Yasmin Islam, whose sister Sabina Nessa was murdered in 2021, has urged Justice Secretary Dominic Raab to put the plan into action.

The front page also reports on upcoming plans for the King’s coronation. 

Today's top stories

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FBI dismisses analysts linked to withdrawn memo on Catholic ideology

The FBI has dismissed five analysts linked to a now-retracted internal memo concerning “Radical Traditionalist Catholic” ideology, a decision following internal reviews that cited procedural errors but no malicious intent. The memo has attracted criticism from allies of former President Trump, alleging anti-Christian bias.

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Mali court sentences French embassy official to 20 years for espionage

A court in Mali has sentenced a French embassy official to 20 years in prison on charges of espionage and undermining state security. The official, detained since August 2025, faces a €5,400 fine and a ban on entering Mali, escalating tensions between the military-led government and France.

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Anthropic calls for AI labs to consider a pause amid control concerns

Anthropic has called for a coordinated pause in the development of advanced AI systems, citing concerns that rapid technological advancements may lead to humans losing control. The company emphasised the need for societal structures to keep pace with AI innovations and to establish verification measures among competing labs.

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Senate blocks extension of FISA surveillance programme as deadline approaches

The Senate voted 47-52 to block an extension of Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which will lapse on 12 June without further action. Seven Republicans joined Democrats in opposing the motion, citing concerns over warrantless surveillance of Americans. The legislation may be revisited next week.

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