Newspaper headlines: 'A dozen ministers desert May on customs'

Image caption The Sunday Telegraph says at least a dozen of Theresa May's cabinet are intending on blocking her plans for a new "customs partnership" with the European Union. Earlier this week Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson described the proposals as "crazy" - and the Sunday Telegraph's sister paper reported on Saturday that HM Revenue and Customs insiders thought the proposals were "unviable".
Image caption The Sunday Times Rich List dominates the front page of the weekend title. It says 94% of the most wealthy people in the country made their own fortunes. The paper says industrialist Jim Ratcliffe is the UK's richest person with £21bn, but celebrity chef Jamie Oliver no longer features.
Image caption Student organisations representing 980,000 university students in the UK are demanding a referendum on any final Brexit deal, the Observer reports. The paper said student leaders were hoping the action taken by students would dwarf the protests of 2010 after the coalition government increased maximum tuition fees in England to £9,000-a-year.
Image caption The Mail on Sunday leads on allegations that Meghan Markle's father worked with photographers to stage a series of pictures, despite pleas from Prince Harry for the media to leave his future father-in-law alone. The paper claims Thomas Markle, 73, could have earned £100,000 from the staged photos, and other pictures.
Image caption The Sunday Mirror reports that a Class A drug has been discovered in the toilets of the Home Office. The paper says police were called to the government department 10 days ago after crystal meth was twice found in bathrooms.
Image caption Serial killer Dennis Nilsen has died aged 72, the Sun on Sunday reports. The murderer, who dismembered his male victims, died of complications from a stomach operation.
Image caption Robots are being introduced to elderly care homes to help solve a staffing crisis in the social care system, the Sunday Express reports. The paper says the humanoid companions "can listen, learn and react to people".
Image caption The Sunday People leads on the plea of a young girl who requires a kidney transplant, which continues its campaign to get more members of the public to become registered organ donors.
Image caption The Star on Sunday says the estranged wife of TV presenter Ant McPartlin believes the couple's 12-year marriage can be saved. The paper quotes sources who claim "she is hopeful of getting back together with her man".