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Newspaper headlines: 'Ukraine's fate in their hands' and 'Praying for peace' | Newspaper headlines: 'Ukraine's fate in their hands' and 'Praying for peace' |
(1 day later) | |
The handshake between presidents Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin as they met in Alaska is on several of Saturday's front pages. | |
Under the headline "Progress, but no deal" the Times says despite the best efforts of the two leaders to sound positive, no ceasefire has been agreed, and major stumbling blocks remain. "The war in Ukraine continues" says the paper. | |
The Guardian says Trump left more questions than answers as he claimed "great progress" was made, but said no deal had been reached. | |
On its front page, the i Weekend says satellite images taken in recent days show that Russia is preparing to test a new nuclear cruise missile, which Putin has claimed could evade US missile defences. | |
Experts have told the paper that the Russians expected Western intelligence agencies to notice their preparations, and used that to gain bargaining power ahead of the summit in Alaska. | |
The Daily Telegraph says the government here is planning to send hundreds of military trainers and engineers to Ukraine to help rebuild its armed forces, if fighting is paused. | |
The paper says the deployment could start within a week of a ceasefire declaration, and it would be done with a public announcement, to show Russia that the West is not turning its back on Kyiv. | |
The report says Sir Keir Starmer has also signed off the use of British fighter jets to help police the skies above Ukraine, with allies. | |
According to the Financial Times, Chancellor Rachel Reeves has asked officials to identify tax reforms that would boost growth. | |
A Labour official tells the paper the move was prompted by the expectation that the Office of Budget Responsibility would downgrade its forecast for productivity growth, which would make it harder for the chancellor to remain within her fiscal rules. | |
The Guardian says figures on Labour's National Executive Committee have spoken to potential candidates to succeed MP Diane Abbott in her constituency in north-east London. | |
Abbott tells the paper the move seems to be pre-empting the results of an investigation into her suspension from the party, because of her comment that Jewish people don't experience racism in the same way as Black people. | |
Labour says there have been no discussions about alternative candidates at any meetings of its National Executive Committee. | |
A report in the Times says the NHS will pay diet and exercise apps according to how much they help patients to lose weight. | |
The rewards will be part of a new mass lifestyle support scheme known as "Healthier you". | |
The paper says tech companies will be paid according to how many people stick with their regime and whether they lose enough weight after a year. | |
According to the Sun, the Prince of Wales is moving his family into what they hope will be their forever home - the eight-bedroom Forest Lodge nestled in a quiet corner of Windsor Great Park and surrounded by nature. | |
The paper says they plan to continue living there, even when he becomes King. Insiders tell the Sun the family are hoping for a fresh start after a difficult time at their current Windsor home, Adelaide Cottage, during which Queen Elizabeth II died and King Charles III and the Princess of Wales were diagnosed with cancer. | |
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