Vision and Courage

Charity sex claims and ‘Queen of fashion’

BBC MetroBBC

A number of front pages are leading with the sex claims against aid workers and others working for charities. The Metro leads with Penny Mordaunt’s warning to the United Nations after claims of rape against its staff.

BBC The iBBC

The i leads with the new sex claims to face Oxfam. It reports that 7,000 regular donors have stopped giving money since the Haiti allegations first emerged and that 26 sexual misconduct allegations had since been made.

BBC The TimesBBC

The Times continues with the coverage of sex claims against charity staff on its front page, after it emerged the former boss of Save the Children Justin Forsyth had been accused of sending inappropriate texts to female staff.

BBC The Daily TelegraphBBC

The Telegraph also reports on Mr Forsyth, who admits he made “unsuitable and thoughtless” comments to female colleagues at Save the Children. In common with many other papers it features a picture of the Queen and Anna Wintour at London Fashion Week.

Alamy The Daily MailAlamy

The Daily Mail reports that Charles Randell, the incoming chairman of the Financial Conduct Authority, has admitted using a “notorious scheme that helped cut tax bills”.

BBC The Financial TimesBBC

Mr Randell said investing in the scheme that makes use of tax breaks available to promote film productions was an “error of judgement”, says the Financial Times.

BBC The GuardianBBC

The Guardian leads with the violence in Syria, reporting that 200 civilians were killed in airstrikes and shelling in eastern Ghouta. The attacks were reportedly performed by forces close to Bashar al-Assad.

BBC The SunBBC

Strictly Come Dancing’s Brendan Cole lost his job on the BBC show after dancing with the Duchess of Cornwall, says the Sun.

BBC The Daily MirrorBBC

The Daily Mirror leads with Tom Evans’s campaign to keep his ill toddler, Alfie, alive after a High Court judge ruled that life support should be withdrawn.

The Daily Telegraph thinks there is something “deeply disturbing” about the leader of a political party warning the press that “change is coming” – as Jeremy Corbyn did on Tuesday.

It says his video message in response to persistent allegations about past links to communist spies is a “wake up call” to those who dismiss the Labour leader as “a harmless old fool”. It’s worthy of a leader in Moscow, not London, it argues.

The Daily Mail is also robust in its response, saying that launching a “menacing attack” – instead of answering questions – only heightens suspicions he has something to hide.

BBC News Daily
Blue line

The main photo on the front page of the Guardian shows a Syrian boy in eastern Ghouta, bleeding from a bandaged head wound. Its headline reads “This is a catastrophe”.

Brexit demands

The Daily Telegraph says the letter from Conservative backbenchers to Theresa May about Brexit has set out “red lines” which make it clear what the prime minister must do to retain their loyalty.

Getty Images Jacob Rees-MoggGetty Images

It says it is the most public intervention to date by the European Research Group, led by Jacob Rees-Mogg.

In its editorial, the Times, which was the first to obtain the letter, describes it as “a polite list of wholly unreasonable demands”.

It says the 62 MPs should reflect on how much harder they are making negotiations and tells Mrs May that a “safe pair of hands” would give them a slap.

Oxfam apologies

The Times says the charity sector has been “pushed deeper into trouble”. It says that, as the government suggested on Tuesday that Oxfam had deliberately misled the police and public about sexual misconduct in Haiti, it was emerging that Save the Children’s former boss had apologised to women at the charity about his behaviour.

The paper says Justin Forsyth now faces questions over his ability to continue as deputy chief executive of Unicef in New York.

Reuters Oxfam International's director Winnie Byanyima, chief executive Mark Goldring and chair Caroline Thomson appeared before MPsReuters

Oxfam International’s director Winnie Byanyima, chief executive Mark Goldring and chair Caroline Thomson appeared before MPs

There was “no gloss, no spin – just sorry, sorry, sorry”. That’s how the Times sketch writer, Patrick Kidd describes the appearance by Oxfam bosses in front of MPs on Tuesday.

It was a rare sound in the Commons he says, certainly not heard from politicians. “It was as if the chief executive Mark Goldring were doing a sponsored two-hour apology to undo some of the damage” of 7,000 people cancelling their regular donations.

The Telegraph’s Michael Deacon says Mr Goldring looked “a meagre, helpless sort of creature… as though a policeman were shining a torch in the face of a baby vole”.

‘Fresh blow’ for FCA

The Financial Times leads with what it calls “the embarrassing revelation” that the incoming head of the Financial Conduct Authority invested in what authorities have said was a tax avoidance scheme.

Charles Randell told MPs it had been an “error of judgement” to be involved in the film partnership.

The FT says the revelation is a “fresh blow” for the authority, which has been criticised for refusing to publish a report on alleged mistreatment of small business customers by RBS.

The Daily Mail says campaigners now want Mr Randell’s appointment blocked. One small business group tells the paper: “If you or I were to try to dodge our taxes for thousands of pounds, sorry wouldn’t be good enough. We need somebody in the post who’s open to seriously trying to resolve the problems with the financial sector.”

Reuters The Queen and Anna WintourReuters

Queen Elizabeth sits on the front row at London Fashion Week with US Vogue editor Anna Wintour

The Times says one woman stole the show at London Fashion Week. “She was short, grey haired and won’t see 90 again,” it says but there was no doubt the Queen was the “star attraction.”

Daily Express calls her Britain’s most reluctant style icon and says her arrival caused gasps among the fashionistas.

The Daily Star says she stole the show – one designer said she hadn’t just been upstaged, but positively dethroned.


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