Newspaper headlines: Bank's Brexit fears and Kylie turns 50

Image caption Tuesday's Telegraph reports that relations between the Bank of England and the Treasury are "very, very bad". According to the paper, the Bank's deputy governor has criticised Chancellor Philip Hammond over his Brexit plans. Meanwhile, its top story is on comments made by a senior NHS England director who says the health service is guilty of a "ridiculous waste of resources".
Image caption The Financial Times also carries a report that the Treasury and Bank of England are "at loggerheads". But its top story is on the economic fallout from Italy's political crisis. Italy has been without a government since its elections in March. The paper says the interim PM has tried to reassure the markets, but the message "failed to register" with investors.
Image caption Also leading with a financial story, the i reports the government is preparing to sell off part of its 71% stake in the Royal Bank of Scotland. It could seek to offload about 10% as early as this week, the paper reports. It says the government could make more than £3bn from the sale, but the chancellor could be criticised because of the drop in share price.
Image caption Meanwhile, figures from the National Child Measurement Programme make the top story for Tuesday's Daily Mail. The statistics show more than 22,000 children leave primary school "dangerously" obese. It is the first time the programme has published official data, the paper says. The paper's front page picture is a newly-released photo of Kylie Minogue, who is celebrating her 50th birthday.
Image caption The Metro also carries a picture of Kylie on its front page. But the newspaper leads with a story about the HS2 rail project, which is planned to link London, Birmingham, Manchester and Leeds. The Mail cites a report from transport group Greengauge 21, which says the project should be replicated elsewhere, linking cities like Bristol, Edinburgh, Cardiff and Newcastle.
Image caption Kylie also appears on the Mirror's front page, but it leads with an interview with Baroness Newlove, the widow of Garry Newlove, who was murdered outside his home in 2007. The paper says two of the three men convicted for killing him have been moved to an open prison and could be released altogether next year after serving 12 years.
Image caption The lead story for the Times is the latest on the charity sector abuse scandal. The newspaper says it has seen a copy of a leaked United Nations report from 2001, which has never been published, which shows it had identified more than 40 aid organisations whose workers were allegedly in "sexually exploitative relationships with refugee children". The papers says that, according to the report, workers traded food, oil and shelter materials for sex.
Image caption The main photo on the front of the Guardian is of Mamoudou Gassama, a Malian man nicknamed "Spiderman" for climbing up a building to rescue a dangling child. The paper's main story is an exclusive claiming Oxford and Cambridge universities have nearly £21bn in wealth including in estates, investments, art and antiques. Cambridge declined to comment but Oxford said its reserves help maintain its high academic standards.
Image caption The Sun splashes on the apparent "fury" at a tattoo of an M16 assault rifle which footballer Raheem Sterling has got on his right leg. It quotes anti-gun campaigners who say he should be dropped from the England World Cup squad. The striker responded on Instagram, saying his father was shot dead when he was two years old and he had since promised never to "touch a gun in my life".
Image caption The front page of Tuesday's Daily Star hails two things: the return of Love Island and a planned pay rise for Britain's troops. The newspaper reports that thousands of soldiers are due to receive a 3% pay rise. It says Defence Minister Tobias Ellwood has ordered the Treasury to follow the recommendations of the independent body that advises the government on military salaries.
Image caption The Express leads with the latest on army veterans who are facing prosecution over their role in The Troubles in Northern Ireland. The newspaper quotes ex-soldier Doug Beattie, who said British soldiers should receive the same royal pardons as convicted IRA killers.
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