What the papers say – October 2
A wide range of stories features on the front of Monday’s newspapers.
A wide range of stories features on the front of Monday’s newspapers.
Josep Borrell said European officials were surprised by the last-minute agreement in Washington and pledged the bloc would carry on helping Ukraine.
Ukraine has increasingly targeted naval facilities in Crimea in recent weeks.
Attacks on Ukraine have killed four civilians and wounded 13 over the past 24 hours.
The sackings follow the dismissal two weeks ago of Defence Minister Oleksii Reznikov over a corruption scandal.
Karin Kneissl’s dance with Vladimir Putin came just months after Russia was accused of poisoning ex-spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter in the UK.
Malakai Wheeler admitted using a Nazi swastika as part of his profile image on social media platform Telegram.
Russia’s Defence Ministry said Ukraine launched 10 cruise missiles at the shipyard.
Mr Kim is expected to seek economic aid and military technology and appears to have something Mr Putin needs: munitions for Russia’s war in Ukraine.
All schools in Leominster were closed on Tuesday and two shelters were set up for evacuated residents.
Maritime UK has asked the Government for a significant increase in investment to fund green shipping innovation.
The strikes were among several Russian attacks across the country overnight, officials said.
Several Russian attacks hit Ukraine overnight, officials said.
Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, Alphabet, Meta and ByteDance must face the highest level of scrutiny under the 27-nation bloc’s Digital Markets Act.
Rishi Sunak said the group had engaged in ‘torture, theft and barbarism’.