Newspaper headlines: Fatal stabbing\, gag orders and Brexiteer \'tests\'
Newspaper headlines: Fatal stabbing, gag orders and Brexiteer 'tests'
By BBC NewsStaff
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A picture of Jodie Chesney, the teenager fatally stabbed in east London on Friday, dominates most of The Sunday Telegraph's front page. Meanwhile, its lead story claims a change in the law to ban confidentiality agreements is to be announced in the wake of the paper's investigation into Sir Philip Green.
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A picture of 17-year-old Jodie also features on the front page of the Sunday Times. Meanwhile, the paper says in its lead story it has seen a document drawn up by Tory Brexiteers containing "three tests" for the PM to answer before they vote on her deal to leave the EU.
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The fatal stabbing in Harold Hill, Romford, is also the lead in the Sunday Express, which describes Jodie as a model student and has a smiling picture of her wearing her scout uniform.
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The Observer says it has seen internal Labour party emails that it claims reveal top officials are opposed to the suspension of several party activists who have been accused of anti-Semitism.
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An impassioned letter from the son of Salisbury novichok victim Dawn Sturgess to Russian president Vladimir Putin, begging him to give up the men responsible for her death, is the lead story in the Sunday Mirror.
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The Sunday People devotes its front page to a picture of a cyclist with a rucksack bearing the Deliveroo logo and claims drug dealers are posing as riders for the food delivery service in order to sell class A drugs.