Horizon scandal’s ‘tragic toll’ and ‘sacked Gregg’
BBC
Post Office Horizon IT scandal dominated most of the pre -pages of Wednesday, the first report of the official investigation, the guilty crimes were misused and prosecuted on the “disaster” effect on the impact. Sir Wyn Williams’ report found that at least 59 people committed suicide at various points, and 10 of them were trying to get their own lives, and more than 13 people might have killed themselves on scandal.
Daily Mail says the campaignists are “blood in their hands”. The Wales Princess Catherine joins the French President Emmanuel Macron and Windsor Castle, while his wife Brigitte joins the state feast while decorating the front page.
The post office scandal jumped to Daily Express and emphasizes the effect of those caught on their lives. And while Catherine stands out, the “new look is hair style” in front of the paper state feast. A praise for the late Norman Tebbit, who served as Cabinet Minister in Margaret Thatcher’s government, is also under the page.
The Horizon scandal was handled on the front page of Times, but votes for the strike of the settled doctors in the UK, leading to the newspaper. The government said that after 90% of the British Medical Association’s 48,000 resettlement members voted with industrial action that supports 90%, it was clear that the wage increase was outside the table. Doctors have been given a 5.4% increase for this financial year after an increase of 22% in the last two years. The prince and princess of Wales were depicted together for the Macron state feast, which has previously warned that Britain and France were dangerously dependent on the US.
The Metro also leads the first volume of his report on the Ufuk scandal, where Sir Wyn has divorced victims, as a result of his troubles, with serious mental health problems and alcohol addiction. The post office apologized “without hesitation” and said he would carefully handle the findings.
Macron’s visit to England and a proposed agreement in the crisis of small boats leads Daily Telegraph. This article reported that the French President asked Sir Keir Starmer to make Britain less attractive to the channel immigrants “one, an output” agreement. Gregg Wallace’s firing from MasterChef is also on the front page. The BBC News understands that the presentation is fired as a result of an investigation into the abuse of the presentation. With new allegations about the TV server, 50 people approached the BBC. Wallace rejects the allegations.
The Sun jumped on Wallace’s thrown to the front page, and accused the presentation of the “indifferent Tattle” in the reporting of the BBC News. MasterChef’s production company Banijay is expected to report a close feedback on the allegations carried out by an independent law company. In a long statement on Instagram on Tuesday, Wallace said that he was cleared with the “most serious and sensational claims” report against him. BBC News did not see the Banijay report.
Wallace insists that it will not be canceled after its dismissal and reports on the front page of Daily Star. For 20 years, Wallace was one of the highest profile servers on British television, and the face of the BBC One dining show. However, at the end of last year, when 13 people accused him of making inappropriate sexual comments, he left the demonstration in November after the first investigation of the BBC.
Guardian is leading the front page with plans to be released on Wednesday, designed to recover the criminal justice system from total collapse. This article reports that thousands of cases that normally be heard in front of a jury should be decided only by judges. Sir Brian Leveson was asked by the Lord Chancellor to prepare a series of offers to reduce the accumulated operation of the cases in the criminal courts. There are about 77,000 cases waiting to be tried in the Crown Court in England and Wales – so some defendants and victims are waiting for years for justice.
The Financial Times is leading the debt warning of the independent budget observer, who says that the UK is faced with “intimidating” risks for public finances. OBR said the country’s capacity to respond to future shocks of the country’s rising debt burden leads to a “significant erosion”.
OBR’s report also leads to the front page of the I paper. British state retirement retirement trilateral lock, says the guard, public finance “sustainable” argues that it makes. The triple lock guarantees that state retirement increases in accordance with inflation, wage increases or 2.5% each year – no matter which one is the highest. This meant that state retirement increased by 4.1% in April 2025.