A mixture of stories in front of Thursday’s papers, and the eye paper takes on a “crushed” delay for the treatment of cancer, which says that the start of tomorrow is likely to occur after a strike by resident doctors. Charities have warned that industrial action – is ready to strike in five days with 50,000 doctors – “essentially” effects will affect people who will have minimal survived cancer such as lungs, liver and brain cancer.
The Times also said on a strike of doctors with NHS England chief executive Sir Jim McKay, saying that doctors would have to face financial results to go on strike. Sir Jim told hospital leaders this week that NHS would be “very resistant” to the demands of doctors on salary. Paper reports that during the previous round of industrial action, doctors claimed overtime to clean the backlog, which concluded NHS leaders concluding that “they had effectively subsidized industrial action”.
The police “is not ready for summer of unrest” writes Daily Telegraph, who goes to the police federation leader Tiff Lynch with warnings that the police force is “being drawn in every direction”. Writing in the paper, police commanders are forced to “select at home or plug the national interval”. She writes that a hotel housing shelter seekers had a “Signal Flair” for more disturbance in the approach.
The “gambling taxpayers are cash” in the UK, leading the Daily Mail. It said that it has seen home office data that shows that more than 6,000 shelters have used debit cards, the government has issued to cover its cost of living, at least once for gambling in the last one year.
The refuge issue is also a front page news for The Sun, with a picture of a person carrying a mattress in the top hotel in London, who says that the paper was being read for those seeking asylum. In the last 24 hours, the paper is labeled “4-Star Fiasco”, listening to some other stories about shelter seekers.
Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch wanted to lead her on the “State-Salashing Argentina President” Javier, she describes the financial time. “Millie is a template” when it is “less clear”, even if it is “less clear”, when it is “less clear”, the paper writes. Badenoch has warned his colleagues against the UK “below the path of anger and despair”, saying that his party could not “be a store for dissatisfaction”.
An 18-month-old skeleton Muhammad Zakaria Aiyob al-Matauk is the major picture for the Guardian, which reports on Israeli attacks on the aid hub and deteriorating starvation in Gaza. Palestinian Faiza Abdul Rahman, who is “constantly dizzy” with food deficiency, says: “We have faced hunger first, but never like this”, a quote paper uses as its main title.
The Daily Express also took a picture of a hungry gooden child yesterday and chased Live Ed Chief Sir Bob Geldoff with a petition to “feed Gaza’s children”. Sir Bob’s call “tortured, nervous, broken and nervous mothers” comes after efforts to raise money for Akal -Hit Ethiopia after 40 years to help Akal -Hit Ethiopia – and the paper calls it a “new petition for the world”.
“It’s home comb,” announces the Daily Star, after the lioness Euro 2025 reached the final of the tournament. If you are confused, the paper is continuing the Wordplay that grows your hair after offering free cut-out ponytail to readers before the semi-final win. This paper now says for a National Bank Holiday if the lioness won the finals, then said that the Prime Minister Sir Kir Stmper has become “silent” after giving a one -day holiday to the country. “Er, what has changed PM?” Asks the star.
To rock, “Vishal” Ozi Osbourne put the daily mirror in front. “Proud Dadaji” said he wanted to spend “his last day” dedicated to his family, according to his friends and a picture shows him with granddaughter Maple. A reference to the legal name of Rock musician, his sister says that a few weeks ago, he was still our John “.
Metro
An inquiry about the death of England’s cricket star Graham Thorpe has heard that the father asked his wife to help end his life. On its front page, the Metro, Amanda Thorpe said that the cricketer fought to face depression after the loss of Kovid lockdown and coaching jobs. “He said he wanted to go to Switzerland. I was in the upheaval,” said Amanda Thorpe.