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The front pages of many newspapers on Tuesday are dominated by the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz and the survivors of the Holocaust. The Metro’s headline reads “In a place of no hope, there is always hope”, accompanied by a picture of 103-year-old Auschwitz survivor Miriam Linial. Linial and other survivors spoke about how they were able to live “full lives after witnessing the horrors” of the Holocaust.
The Financial Times reports on DeepSeek, a Chinese AI-Chatbot app that has caused tech stocks to tumble after outperforming its US rivals with “far less” computing power. The app’s abilities have “stunned Silicon Valley” and investors are reassessing investment in AI, according to the FT. One chief strategist warned that this shows how “vulnerable” AI trading still is.
The Daily Express splashes with a photograph of 95-year-old Auschwitz survivor Stanislaw Zalewski and King Charles’s speech at the camp on the anniversary of its liberation. The article quotes the King as saying, “It is a moment when we recall the depths to which humanity can sink when evil is allowed to flourish, ignored for too long by the world.”
The i paper also focuses on Auschwitz survivors, with one issuing a warning to “avoid the mistake of the 1930s” in reference to the Holocaust. King Charles, who was at Auschwitz for the 80th anniversary, told the world to “never be a bystander to hate”. The i also reports on the UK’s biggest banks cutting rates on their flexible savings accounts, offering 1.5% less than the market average.
Other headlines include the Daily Telegraph’s report on non-crime hate laws set to be expanded, according to a leaked Home Office report. The Times reports on claims of two-tier policing and how right-wing extremists “frequently exploit” the grooming gangs scandal. The Guardian focuses on tech investor’s response to DeepSeek as a “Sputnik moment” and warning from Auschwitz survivors of a “new age of hatred”. The Daily Mail covers the Royal Family’s 80th-anniversary commemoration with a full-colour account, while The Sun reports on former Premier League referee David Coote’s confession of taking cocaine as a means of escape over fears of coming out as gay in football. The Daily Mirror highlights Auschwitz prisoner Stanislaw Zalewski’s words that it’s the “world’s duty to remember” what happened. Meanwhile, the Daily Star reports on DeepSeek’s effect on US tech
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