âHow many OAPs will freezeâ and âdonât shootâ
The Sunday Times has spoken to Russian troops captured by Ukraine, during Kyivâs incursion across the border into the Kursk region. The paper tells of their panic at Ukraineâs surprise invasion. A 22-year-old architecture student reveals that he had never expected to find himself in battle, having been told only that his compulsory military service would be spent training. The paper paints a picture of chaos, desperation and disorder among the Russian ranks. âDonât shoot weâre conscriptsâ is the headline.
An interview with the Work and Pensions Secretary provides The Observerâs lead story. Liz Kendall tells the paper itâs time to end what she calls âa blame cultureâ, aimed at people out of work . She says a âdrastic overhaulâ is needed to fix a âbrokenâ back-to-work system. And she describes her task of bringing in major reforms as âone of the biggest challenges the country facesâ, with a near record 2.8 million people out of work because of long term sickness.
The Sunday Telegraph highlights comments from the health ombudsman that clapping the NHS during the pandemic may have been dangerous because it put the organisation âbeyond criticismâ. Rebecca Hilsenrath warns against treating the health service as a ânational religionâ and calls on its leaders to overhaul the culture and listen to those that it fails. Her office has submitted evidence to an investigation of the NHS, set up by the Health Secretary, Wes Streeting. It is due to be published next month.
The Mail on Sunday says the Labour governmentâs decision to settle public sector wage disputes â what it calls Sir Keir Starmerâs âcapitulation to his union paymastersâ â will leave Britain with a ÂŁ14bn bill. The paper says it has seen what it calls âdevastating analysisâ that the costs of pay deals for GPs, teachers and other workers will be far more than the ÂŁ10bn set aside by the chancellor. Critics tell the paper the prime minister is treating taxpayers as âcash machinesâ to fund the rises.
The Sunday Express claims the Chancellor Rachel Reeves has âburiedâ a report revealing what it says is the âdevastatingâ impact of axing winter fuel payments for millions of pensioners. The paper says she is believed to have ordered the assessment of how making the payments means-tested would hit vulnerable people, but is refusing to make it public. The headline asks âHow many OAPs will freeze this winter?â The chancellor has said the decision was essential because of the state of the public finances left by the previous government.
And the Sun on Sunday reports that King Charles is axing Prince Andrewâs 10-strong private security team from his Royal Lodge in Windsor. The paper says the move puts the âdisgraced royalâ under new pressure to quit the 30-room mansion heâs lived in for 20 years.
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