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A judicial review could be launched against the UK government's decision to allow a Franco-Dutch company to make the new blue British passport, reports the FT. The paper says shares in De La Rue, which makes the current passport, dropped 6% after the announcement and the company claims the contract was only awarded to Gemalto because it undercut its rivals.
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De La Rue's legal fight is also the Daily Mail's lead. It says 266,000 people have signed the paper's petition demanding the government reverse its decision.
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Police are being "trained" to hide evidence that could help the defence in cases, the Times claims. The paper says it has seen a dossier detailing "routine and deliberate" behaviour to withhold sensitive material.
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Ambulance crews are having to look after patients in the back of their van or in hospital corridors because of delays at A&E units, the Guardian reports. The paper says that in the past three months around 600,000 ambulances had to wait more than 15 minutes to hand over a patient to hospital staff .
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Meanwhile, the Telegraph reports a former Tory minister's claims that his bowel cancer was not spotted because of budget cuts in the NHS. Writing in the paper, Andrew Lansley said he introduced a national screening programme in 2010 but it failed to be rolled out across England by 2016 as planned.
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The Metro leads on claims of "classroom violence" against teachers. It says staff are regularly subjected to attacks from children as young as four. One teacher told the NASUWT teaching union conference being "spat at, bitten and pinched" was part of her daily routine.
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The Sun leads on its own investigation into the thefts of tens of thousands of mobile phones from criminals on mopeds. It says the gadgets are being sent to and sold in Nigeria.
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The story of a victim who alleges he was abused by a nun is the Daily Express's lead.
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The Mirror leads on the story of a IRA bomb survivor and a three-year-old victim.
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The Star reports a top British detective saying the chances of finding missing Madeleine McCann are "almost impossible".