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Sunday morning UK news briefing: Today's top headlines from The Telegraph
2022-03-28 00:00:00.0     每日电讯报-英国新闻     原网页

       

       Welcome to your early morning news briefing from The Telegraph - a round-up of the top stories we are covering today. To receive twice-daily briefings by email, sign up to our Front Page newsletter for free.

       1. Chaos as Joe Biden says Vladimir Putin ‘cannot remain in power’

       Joe Biden appeared to call for regime change in Russia, as he said that Vladimir Putin “cannot remain in power” in a highly charged speech in Warsaw.

       “For God’s sake, this man cannot remain in power,” the US president said, as he urged democracies around the world to unite against the Russian president in a speech in Poland’s capital littered with historical references to war in Europe. Read the full story.

       2. ‘Crippling’ sanctions could be lifted if Russia withdraws from Ukraine, says Liz Truss

       Britain could lift sanctions crippling Russia if Vladimir Putin withdraws from Ukraine and commits to "no further aggression", Liz Truss has said.

       In an interview with The Telegraph, the Foreign Secretary set out a blueprint for the so-called "off ramp" that the Russian president could be offered to halt his assault on Ukraine. Read the full story.

       3. Prince William suggests he may not succeed the Queen and his father as head of the Commonwealth

       The Duke of Cambridge has acknowledged that he may not succeed the Queen and the Prince of Wales as head of the Commonwealth, as he vowed not to be "telling people what to do".

       Reflecting on his eight-day Caribbean tour, the Duke spoke candidly about how it had "brought into even sharper focus" questions about the past and the future. Read the full story.

       4. All schools to be open for 32.5 hours weekly by 2023, ministers will announce

       Children should have at least 32.5 hours of school each week, ministers will announce next week amid concerns that some schools are short changing pupils on lesson time.

       By September 2023, all schools will be expected to comply with this, under plans set out by the Department for Education (DfE) in a new white paper on Monday. Read the full story.

       5. Henry VIII too ‘horrible’ for new BBC history series

       The BBC’s new landmark art history series has a straightforward brief: to tell the story of Britain over 1,500 years.

       But there will be one notable omission. The show, Art That Made Us, will skip the reign of Henry VIII after the artist invited to cover that period declared that he loathed him. Read the full story.

       If you want to receive twice-daily briefings like this by email, sign up to the Front Page newsletter here. For two-minute audio updates, try The Briefing - on podcasts, smart speakers and WhatsApp.

       


标签:综合
关键词: Vladimir Putin     Truss     schools     Ukraine     Britain     twice-daily briefings     story    
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