Newspaper headlines: Dettori's '£100m insurance' and 'Harry's a fool'
- Published
A broad variety of stories feature on the front of Sunday's papers - many include the latest on the situation in the Middle East as 39 Palestinian prisoners were released on Saturday night in exchange for 13 Israeli hostages and four Thai nationals.
The Sunday Times carries an interview with relatives of one of the Israelis set free on Friday, external. Mayan Moshe describes how her 72-year-old aunt Adina thought she was being led away to be executed when she was taken out of the Hamas tunnels she had been kept in for seven weeks. Ms Moshe realised she was being freed only when she saw the Red Cross buses.
Irish-Israeli nine-year-old Emily Hand is the focus on the front of the Sunday Mirror after her release on Saturday night. Her father Thomas Hand vowed Emily will have the best Christmas and Hanukah ever., external
The Sunday Telegraph says emotional scenes have been playing out in Israeli hospitals and medical centres as families were and continue to be reunited after the hostages' release.
Separately, the paper reports the head of the charity regulator has promised to clamp down on bodies that host antisemitic extremists, external - after reports of antisemitic sermons from some mosques linked to charities.
Continuing with domestic news "Stop small boats or we're sunk", is the Sunday Express headline. It says Conservative MPs have told Rishi Sunak unless the small boats in the English Channel are stopped by the next general election the party faces "catastrophe" at the polls, external. One MP said eight out of ten voters he spoke to demanded to know what was being done.
Horseracing legend Frankie Dettori is on the front of the Sunday People clutching a koala as the tabloid claims ITV's bosses have struck a £100m insurance deal, external to get the 52-year-old Italian into the I'm a Celebrity jungle in Australia.
The Observer carries a warning from the government's top immigration adviser who has criticised plans to stop overseas care workers from bringing family members to the UK, external. Proposals to stop workers bringing dependants should be halted unless jobs are made more appealing to Britons, Prof Brian Bell tells the paper.
Finally, the Sun on Sunday previews a new Royal book out later next week about Prince Harry and Meghan Markle. In the report, the tabloid claims King Charles called the Duke of Sussex "a fool", external after the pair appeared in a Netflix documentary last year. Buckingham Palace has declined to comment on reports.
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