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What the papers say – June 16 | The Independent
2022-06-16 00:00:00.0     独立报-英国新闻     原网页

       

       The nation’s papers are led by the sudden resignation of the Prime Minister’s ethics adviser Lord Geidt.

       The Times, The Guardian and The Daily Telegraph report the peer said he had been “frustrated” with Boris Johnson’s response to the partygate investigations, and described resignation as a “last resort” that “sends a critical signal into the public domain”.

       Recommended No 10 confirms Johnson considering withdrawal from human rights treaty

       The story is also carried by Metro and i.

       Meanwhile, the Daily Mail reports Justice Secretary Dominic Raab is looking at the possibility of ignoring future rulings from the European Court of Human Rights after its role in blocking the initial Rwanda deportation flight.

       The Daily Express says Home Secretary Priti Patel was left “furious” over the court’s “secret” process.

       The Independent carries first-hand accounts from some of those who were aboard the cancelled flight.

       Elsewhere, the Daily Mirror leads with a plea for a donor heart for a 16-month old girl.

       The Financial Times reports the US Federal Reserve has stepped in to try taming the country’s highest inflation in 40 years.

       Recommended Opposition ‘mobs’ will not halt Rwanda deportations, says Priti Patel Labour MP calls for talks with Taliban after ‘heart-rending’ Afghanistan trip Armed forces anti-bullying line receives 660 calls in 20 months

       And the Daily Star says scientists have invented a pill to replace exercise.

       


标签:综合
关键词: Priti     flight     Rights     anti-bullying     Secretary     calls     Recommended     Rwanda     described resignation     Patel    
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