The Sunday papers mark the second day of the weekend, but they are full of news, including Iranian vengeance threats, a spat between two Conservative leadership hopefuls, and a Nottingham stabbing victims’ families official complaint. The Observer features the conflict in the Middle East, with Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s promise of vengeance after the assassination of Hassan Nasrallah. Bad blood brews in the Conservative leadership contest as Kemi Badenoch swears to vanquish Robert Jenrick to the Sunday Express. She promised to stop illegal smuggling and boats carrying illegal immigrants no matter what it takes to take down the favorite.
The Sunday Mirror reports on the complaint issued by the families of the Nottingham stab victims after Panorama’s show on the killer’s family aired. They accused the BBC of making their trauma worse by broadcasting the episode. Valdo Calocane stabbed three people, two students, and a school caretaker in 2023. After the show aired, the statement from the BBC read, “Complaints will be looked at according to our procedure.”
The Sunday People has news that police in the UK have joined their US counterparts in their investigation of US rapper P Diddy out of fear that UK women were also sexually abused by him. A US source revealed, “Outside the States, he enjoyed no place more than the UK.” The Sunday Times quotes Benjamin Netanyahu, who sees the killing of Hassan Nasrallah as a “historic turning point.” However, as 50,000 individuals flee Israel’s threat of revenge and full-blown war loom over Lebanon.
The Sunday Telegraph reports on the scandal of freebies that caused Rosie Duffield, a Labour MP, to quit the political party after accusing Prime Minister Starmer of “sleaze, nepotism, and apparent avarice.” The Sun issues a statement that Andy Carroll and Towie Star Billi Mucklow are divorcing, while the Daily Star issues a warning that utilized underwear may harbor spiders, which can bite people if they wear them
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