Uk Newspaper headlines: 'Explosion in Middle East' and OBE for horse at Queen's funeral By Editor - October 2, 2024 0 21 FacebookTwitterPinterestWhatsApp Iran's missile bombardment of Israel, following an assault on its Hezbollah ally in Lebanon, dominates virtually all entrance pages on Wednesday. The Times headlined “Explosions in the Middle East” featured images of rockets raining down on town of Ashkelon and two “violent situations” in Tel Aviv, the place six individuals had been killed in a gun and knife assault. “Iran's new attack on Israel” is the way it describes the Metro missile assault, which follows the same bombing in April. Photos of the combating inside Lebanon illustrate the story, together with Israeli airstrikes in Beirut and firing by Israeli tanks. “Revenge from above” is how the Daily Mirror describes Iran's assault. A sub-headline speaks of “fears of total war”. The Guardian studies an Israeli pledge to retaliate after the Iranian assault. According to the newspaper, the battle seems to be “spinning out of control”. According to the Daily Mail, Israel's “Iron Dome” anti-missile defenses stay robust, and now the nation “vows retaliation”. The US has threatened Iran with a “severe response” for its assault on Israel, saying “the world was horrified” after the missiles had been launched, the Daily Express studies. Iran's “missile attack against Israel” additionally leads the Financial Times, the place one other headline talks of a “Lebanon exodus” as a million individuals search refuge from the combating. The paper ran a front-page story about Jay-Z and different celebrities leaving accounting agency BDO after theft claims. It says that the BDO denies the allegations. The Daily Telegraph brings the drama in Israel to its readers with a journalist's first-person report titled “A rocket missed me by a minute”. Paul Nucci writes after his expertise on the Israeli motorway, “We were lucky, very lucky.” Along with its story about “fears of a new war” within the Middle East, the paper featured a narrative of a girl getting into the “granny pants era” and feeling “empowered” over a photograph of a pair of orange knickers on the washing line. Is particular. “Hellfire” is how The Sun summed up Tuesday's missile assault. Under the headline “Thick Knowles”, the newspaper additionally studies that DIY SOS presenter Nick Knowles has allegedly hurled abuse at “women from the North-East”. The newspaper says he made offensive feedback in a “lewd” chat with a younger charity employee, leaving her “feeling embarrassed and humiliated”. It additional added, Knowles mentioned, “He encountered hundreds of people in the course of his work and could not be expected to remember everyone he met.” The newspaper says the BBC “declined to comment” however mentioned it’s “against all inappropriate behaviour” and “has robust procedures in place if issues are raised”. The struggle within the Middle East is nowhere to be seen on the entrance web page of the Daily Star, which options an OBE for a horse attending the Queen's funeral. Lord Firebrand “Funeral Horse” additionally discovered two sugar cubes. With inputs from BBC