‘Putin demands land for peace’ and ‘War on motorists’
The global reaction to Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin’s Alaska Summit stands out in the newspapers on Sunday. Sunday Times is leading with more details than the meeting and said that Putin offered to freeze the front in two Ukraine states if Kyiv’s troops were withdrawn from the Donbas region. This article also goes to the White House on Monday to meet Trump.
Sunday Telegraph, Trump “Putin’in Ukraine’s Mineral Rich Donetsk region to end the war to support Russia to support the request to support the” Putin’s Land Grab “scope. The article, in other places, Labour’s new low traffic neighborhoods and 20Mph clock regions, leaving the battle against the war”. Telegraph says that conservatives call the movement of the conservative “kicking the teeth in teeth”.
Zelensky “trapped in Trump and Putin Vice” declares the mail on Sunday. This article is afraid that the world leaders will have to give up their place for a “fragile peace” at a meeting with Trump on Monday. Elsewhere, the article considers the former Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s Alaska meeting as the “summit that encourages vomiting in diplomatic history”.
They look great in Sunday Express, a warning that the world is in serious danger if the world “enters Putin”. This article excerpts from foreign policy experts who have been at the risk of “the risk of failure of the greatest security difficulty” since the Second World War of England and Europe. He is afraid that Trump’s race for a peace agreement will “reward Russia and leave other nations under the risk of invasion.”
The Sunday mirror calls for former workers’ leader Neil Kinnock’s government to call “60,000 children out of poverty”. In an interview with the article, Kinnock said that the conservatives had a challenge that would “make Charles Dickens angry”.
The observer is an OP-ED from the Minister of Interior Yette Cooper, whom he defends the prohibition of the Palestinian action as a terrorist group. He says it is more than just a regular protest group known for occasional stunts.
The Sun definitely directs the BBC’s probe to dance. This article says the publisher has brought police to investigate the allegations surrounding the show. BBC did not comment on developments. BBC News approached the MET police to comment.
Finally, Daily Star warns a warning about “Lauz seagulls”, saying that drunks and bully seagulls grabs the pints in the parks and “collecting fights with Binmen”. Paper says birds became aggressive after downloading the drinks thrown by people in parks and beaches. So, the garbage pays attention to this “beer -swollen poultry psychos” visit.