the head of the un refugee agency has said the policy will set a catastrophic precedent . hello, and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are sonia sodha, the chief leader writer at the observer, and olivia utley, the assistant comment editor for the daily telegraph. tomorrow s front pages, let s get stuck in. the metro reports on the first flight taking asylum seekers from the uk to rwanda. it s due to take place on tuesday, after another legal challenge to the government s policy was rejected. the daily mail though says reports that only a handful of people may actually be on the flight make it a farce . meanwhile, leaders of the church of england have condemned the plans. the i covers a letter signed by all 25 bishops who sit in the house of lords saying the policy shames britain . the guardian leads with reports that the eu is ready to launch legal action, after uk ministers published new legislation which would scrap parts
the guardian features a stark warning from the confederation of british industry that overriding the northern irish deal will damage uk investment. the times leads on what it calls a crackdown on universities, who could be forced to reveal investment from foreign actors in a bid to stop uk values from being compromised . according to the daily mirror, borisjohnson is to shelve plans to extend free school meals to all children living in poverty. one million kids to go hungry is its headline. and the daily express covers the rail strikes expected to take place this summer, as ministers vow to do whatever it takes to prevent the rail unions holding britain to ransom. let us begin our chat. we re going to start with the daily telegraph. lovely to have you back. rolando has hit back at criticism of the migrant scheme rwanda. it heated up and we got the verdict from the judge at the high court. so, rwanda have responded. what did they say? figs high court. 50, rwanda have
might not change that. thank you very much for that. thank you both and have a cracking week, and may be a busy one. thank you and thank you forjoining us for the papers. good night. hello and a very warm welcome to the film review on bbc news. i m jane hill. and to take us through this week s cinema releases is mark kermode. hi, mark. what have you been watching? quite the mixed bag. we havejurassic world dominion. the dinosaurs are back. we have swan song, starring german legend udo kier. and all my friends hate me. is it a comedy? is it a horror movie? dinosaurs are back. that s it. end of the review. there we go. thank you very much. thank you for watching. so, this picks up four years after fallen kingdom. man and dinosaurs must coexist because the dinosaurs are now out in the world. also co existing are the stars of the originaljurassic park movies and the stars of the jurassic world movies. see what they ve done? brought them all together, kind of big variety stage. th
to his fans about the facial paralysis that s forced him to cancel a series of shows. england s cricketers have it all to do at trent bridge today, after a dominant start to the second test by new zealand, who are building a big first innings. good morning, for many of us the weekend promises some warm sunshine, but the further north you are across the uk, there will be some pretty hefty showers around and it will be windy. i ll have all the weather details here on request. on breakfast. good morning, it s saturday june. the high court has ruled that a flight taking asylum seekers from the uk to rwanda can go ahead on tuesday, despite a legal bid by campaigners. it s the first flight under a new government policy deporting those who illegally enter the uk to rwanda to apply for asylum there. mark easton reports. is it lawful to give people seeking asylum in the uk a one way ticket to rwanda? telling them to pursue refugee status thousands of miles south in east africa? th
and japan takes its first tentative steps to reopening the country to tourists after a 2 year ban due to the pandemic. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are the talktv presenter, daisy mcandrew, and the broadcaster, david davies. i david davies. want to bring you the actual front pages i want to bring you the actual front pages will be seeing tomorrow morning. the times leads with further industrial action on the railways, reporting that the union which represents train drivers aslef plans onjoining the rmt s planned strike. the sun reports on prince william being pictured selling copies of the big issue, and says it was inspired by his mother s undercover visits to help the homeless. millions of people will be given the chance to buy a home under plans by borisjohnson to allow housing association tennants the right to buy. that s according to the express. the guardian highlights the knock on effects of rising