Labor MP resigns over dispute over gifts and Iran warns Israel of assassination news-admin 4 hours ago The conflict in the Middle East is on many of today’s headlines. “Iran threatens revenge” over the killing of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, says the front page of The Observer. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei vows his death “will not go unavenged” as his country observes five days of official mourning. (BBC) The Sunday Mirror leads with the official complaint from the families of the stabbing victims in Nottingham after Panorama’s show about the killer’s family. “BBC has made trauma a million times worse,” reads the headline. Valdo Calocane stabbed two students and a schoolteacher in 2023. It quotes a sentence from the BBC: “Complaints will be considered according to our procedure.” (BBC) The Sunday People exclusive claims British police have joined the ‘investigation’ into US rapper P. Diddy over fears women here were also sexually assaulted by him, as US investigators arrive in London. An American source told the newspaper: “He enjoyed nothing more outside the United States than in Britain.” (BBC) Labor MP Rosie Duffield, who left the Labor Party over the ‘freebies’ scandal, dominates the front page of The Sunday Telegraph. The newspaper says she is leaving after accusing Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer of “sleaze, nepotism and apparent greed”. (BBC) Benjamin Netanyahu calls the assassination of Hezbollah’s leader a “historic turning point,” according to The Sunday Times. But as Israel claims it has “settled the score,” the threat of “revenge” and outright war looms in Lebanon, where 50,000 people have fled. (BBC) Footballer Andy Carroll’s divorce from Towie star Billi Mucklow headlines The Sun’s front page. The newspaper says the couple split in July, with Carroll saying: “We are underway with divorce proceedings.” (BBC) The Daily Star warns people that used underwear may harbor spiders. “Be careful” if you plan to wear them because the “beasts” can bite you, the paper says. (BBC) (BBC) Sign up for our morning newsletter and receive BBC News in your inbox. (BBC) Related Internet Links