The global response to Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin’s Alaska Summit is prominently in Sunday’s papers. Sunday Times led the meeting with more information, reporting that Putin offered to freeze the front lines in two Ukrainian provinces, if Kiev’s soldiers withdrew from the area of Donbas. Paper previously visited President Volodimare Zelanski at the White House on Monday to meet Trump.
The Sunday Telegraph follows with his coverage of “Putin’s Land Grab”, suggests that Trump is willing to support Putin’s demand that Ukraine surrenders the mineral-rich Donnetsk region in Russia to end the war. The “War on Motor Moterals” has renewed. The telegraph says that the conservatives called the move “a kick in the teeth”.
Zelancesi “Tram and Putin are stuck in Vice”, declares a mail on Sunday. Paper says that world leaders are afraid that the Ukrainian President will be forced to leave his motherland’s health for “delicate peace” in his meeting on Monday with Trump. In other places, the paper spotlight as “the most vomiting catalytic in diplomatic history” at former PM Boris Johnson’s meeting of former PM Boris Johnson.
A warning of experts that the world is “in severe danger if Putin in the west” is the Putin “on Sunday Express. Paper has cited foreign policy experts who say that Britain and Europe World War have been in danger of “thwarting the biggest security challenge” since two. It says that critics fear that the race to secure Trump’s peace agreement “will reward Russia and put other countries at risk of invasion”.
Sunday’s mirror called the government to “scrapping” a two-child cap “to” raise 60,000 children out of poverty “on former labor leader Neil Kinock. In an interview with The Paper, Kinnok says that the conservatives have left the country in a state of difficulty that will “make Charles Dickens fierce”.
The Observer has an op-ed from the Home Secretary Yett Cooper, in which she again defends the prosecution of Palestine action as a terrorist group. She says that it is just “more than a regular protest group known for topical stunts”.
Suraj dances strictly in the BBC investigation. Paper says the broadcaster has brought the police to investigate the allegations around the show. The BBC has not commented on the developments. BBC News has approached the Met Police for comment.
Finally, the Daily Star issued a warning of “Legal Lout Galls”, stating that drunken and miscreants are snatching pins in seal parks and “raising quarrels with Binmen”. Paper says that birds become aggressive after leaving the drinks left by people on parks and beaches. Therefore, the litter in “beer swilling winged psycho” is beware of a trip.
Sunday Telegraph is a result of Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin’s summit in Alaska. “Trump supports Putin’s land grab” Reads the title of paper. On Sunday Mail says that the future of Ukraine as a sovereign nation hangs in balance with its title, “Zelansky Trump and Putin are stuck in Vice”Sunday Express, former Defense Secretary Sir Grant Csps cites that what Ukraine is called is in danger of being forced. “A hollow deal”,
According to Sunday Times, the former chief of security at HMP Wandsworth in London was secretly treated with organized criminals. An inquiry by paper Dawa Bobby Cunningham met an alleged cocaine smuggling at his home, and was the theme of whistleblowing reports after transferring serious criminals to more generous jails. The paper says the 34 -year -old was allowed to resign at the medical ground before being dismissed and about 160,000 pounds. Mr. Cunningham – who did not respond to the Times request for comments – was forced to pay the money. The jail service told the paper that when members of the employees come down from its standards, it does not hesitate to take action.
Former labor leader, Neil Kinnok has said Two-child-profit hats According to the front page of the Sunday Mirror, the scrap is to be done. In an interview, he has called for money tax on the top one percent of the earnings, who say that he will expel 600,000 children out of poverty.
On Sunday, Surya says that the BBC has told the police as part of an investigation, which is dancing in dancing in paper calls. “Its biggest crisis”It quotes a metropolitan police spokesperson, who states that “the investigation is in its early stages”. It is not clear to whom it is related. The BBC says it does not comment on the police investigation.
On Sunday Mail says researchers are using researchers in the US artificial intelligence To indicate the exact due date of pregnant women. Paper says that only 4% of children in Britain are born on their fixed date. AI Tool – developed and trained using over two million ultrasound images – according to the report, was 92% accurate.