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The i Paper reports that China may be blocked from critical UK sites in the future, after accusations of sabotage were levelled against Scunthorpe’s Chinese owners.
The Times says government insiders believe Jingye intended to stop the UK producing steel from scratch, to force it to rely on imports from China.
The Financial Times leads with the latest twist of the American tariffs drama, saying technology firms such as Apple and Microsoft – who thought they had got a reprieve – have had their hopes dashed. It says US President Trump’s commerce secretary, Howard Lutnick, has insisted the exemption for smartphones and computers will be only brief. He has said separate tariffs will come in soon for semi-conductors.

Several papers still focus on the attack on prison officers by Hashem Abedi, the brother of the Manchester Arena bomber.
The Daily Mirror’s front page headline asks “why on earth did he have boiling oil?”. It says prison staff are calling for rapid action to protect them, while the Daily Mail says MPs think it is “time to stop appeasing extremists in our jails”.
The decision to bring in Army planning experts to tackle the Birmingham bin strike is described by The Daily Telegraph as “desperate”. The paper says the move also risks inflaming tensions between Labour and unions, after one of the city’s Labour MPs accused Unite of holding one-point-two million residents “to ransom”.
The headline in the Times is dismissive of the military’s role, saying the Army is to “tackle the bin strike… from the office”.
And the American pop singer, Katy Perry, is pictured on many of the front pages, ahead of her trip to space on the Blue Origin rocket, owned by Amazon’s Jeff Bezos.
The Daily Express says she is “Popping off to space”. The Telegraph calls her a “rising star”.

