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What the papers say – November 28

Here are the lead stories making Thursday’s newspapers.

Rachel Vickers-Price
Wednesday 27 November 2024 20:23 EST
A collection of British newspapers (Peter Byrne/PA)
A collection of British newspapers (Peter Byrne/PA) (PA Archive)

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Five unnamed people suspected of facilitating Mohamed Al Fayed amid abuse allegations lead Thursday’s papers alongside the build-up to Friday’s vote on the assisted dying bill.

The Daily Mirror and The Guardian lead on the launch of a police investigation into those who may have helped former Harrods boss in his alleged sexual abuse of more than 111 women and girls.

The Times reports David Cameron’s change of heart on the assisted dying bill ahead of the vote.

The i‘s headline warns the early release of prisoners could put the public at risk from violent sex offenders.

The Daily Express focuses on farmer Olly Harrison’s words amid a backlash over the Government’s inheritance tax changes.

The Daily Mail and The Daily Telegraph both lead on Tory leader Kemi Badenocj’s words on migration.

The Metro reports on a mystery winner of £177 million in the National Lottery.

Financial Times splashes on tensions mounting in Paris as French prime minister Michael Barnier warns of fiscal turmoil.

The Sun leads on the latest blow to ITV’s This Morning programme with the departure of boss Martin Frizell.

Lastly, the Daily Star splashes on the run of wet weather across the UK.

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