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Share Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email A harrowing image of a large home totally engulfed in flames in Los Angeles is the main image on the Guardian front page. The paper says fast-moving wildfires have torn through several neighbourhoods of Los Angeles, killing at least two people and destroying more than 1,000 buildings. The paper says about 70,000 people were ordered to evacuate. The Guardian’s second story reports Meta’s decision to axe fact checkers has set the tech giant on a collision course with legislators in the UK and EU, according to experts. “Treasury steps in to halt market mayhem” headlines the Daily Telegraph as it reports the government has been forced to intervene to stabilise financial markets over “growing concern over the effects of Rachel Reeves’ Budget and a surge in borrowing costs”. A striking image on the front page shows a baby being born on a migrant dinghy while making the crossing between the West African coast and Lanzarote. The boy and mother are both reported to be in good health. Piers Morgan has also quit Rupert Murdoch’s media empire, the paper reports. The i says the chancellor faces extra tax rises or cutting public services as the UK’s “borrowing costs turn toxic”. The paper writes economists are sending warnings to the Treasury over a “toxic combination” of factors hitting the UK. But the Treasury says it has “an iron grip” on finances. Also on the front, Reeves is pictured in front of a China flag as the i writes the chancellor will put the “economy before human rights” as she visits Beijing this week. The Daily Mail also leads on the chancellor drawing up contingency plans for emergency spending cuts or tax rises due to the government borrowing costs soaring. The paper says economists say a spike in the rates could leave the Treasury facing a £10bn-a-year increase in debt interest payments. The paper reports Treasury sources acknowledge Ms Reeves could be forced to act as soon as March if sceptical financial markets continue to raise the cost of borrowing. At the top of the page, flames engulf a LA neighbourhood. The paper compares its to an “apocalypse” as “stars flee for their lives from blazing homes”. The Financial Times leads with European leaders warning Donald Trump not to meddle with the continent’s borders, a day after the US president-elect refused to rule out taking Greenland by force. The broadsheet quotes German Chancellor Olaf Scholz insisting borders must never be moved by force and France’s foreign minister saying the EU would not let another nation attack its borders. The paper’s second story says Lloyds Banking Group will allow Halifax, Lloyds and Bank of Scotland customers to use any branches across the brands, fuelling union concerns it is preparing to shut hundreds of locations and axe jobs. The Times has an interview with Trump’s incoming director of counter-terrorism, who says the UK must bring back British members of Islamic State held in Syrian prison camps. Sebastian Gorka tells the paper the UK must honour its “commitment”. The Times observes his intervention will concern Downing Street and is the latest signal Trump’s administration will be “taking a more muscular approach towards the US’s allies”. “Groomed by gangs… butchered on bus at 14” is the Metro’s headline as the mother of the boy stabbed to death in south-east London speaks to the paper. Mary Bokassa told the paper her son Kelyan was taken advantage of by gangs. The 14-year-old was killed travelling on a bus in Woolwich on Tuesday. The Daily Express quotes the head of a review criticising Labour’s three-year delay in reforming social care. Sir Andrew Dilnot said the wait is “inappropriately” long and will fail millions. Proposals on social care’s long-term funding is unlikely to be delivered before 2028. Pictured is the Princess of Wales – who turns 43 today- and is celebrating a “quiet birthday” this year after a “brutal” year. The Daily Mirror chooses a similar headline to cover Kelyan’s death. It writes there are fears “he was deliberately targeted in a tit-for-tat war”. Also on the front is Coleen Rooney who says her relationship with husband Wayne is stronger than ever. “Cheryl stalked by killer” reports the Sun, as it writes the singer has been stalked by a convicted killer. The paper says Daniel Bannister, 49, who was jailed for the manslaughter of a man in 2012 in a separate offence, has admitted breaching a restraining order by trying to contact the star. Sir Keir Starmer is also pictured as the Sun writes Labour has been accused of being “in chaos” over the rape gangs public inquiry row. It comes after Labour MPs voted down an attempt by the Tories to officially call for a national inquiry. The Daily Star mocks up a man with knife and fork ready to dig into a Christmas tree. The paper reports on Belgians being warned not to turn their Christmas trees into food. A spokesman for the country’s federal agency for food chain security said: “There is no way to ensure that eating Christmas trees is safe – either for people or animals.”
Militant £140,000-a-year RMT boss Mick Lynch who presided over rail strikes that have struck misery for millions of passengers announces he is retiring
EXCLUSIVESAS Rogue Heroes is a travesty: Paddy Mayne was abandoned by the military at war’s end and portraying him as a lawless neo-gangster is plain wrong, historian Damien Lewis says
Police launch hunt for man who ‘sexually assaulted woman after she pulled over in lay-by to help him’