The Metro says: Steve Wright, known as the Suffolk Strangler for murdering five women in Ipswich, has been arrested in connection with the unsolved murder of a 17-year-old girl.
Browsing: The Metro
The Metro is a freesheet tabloid British newspaper that is politically neutral. The paper never endorses a political candidate and claims to remain neutral in its reporting.
The paper is distributed each morning on trains and buses, and at railway/Underground stations, airports and hospitals across selected urban areas of England, Wales and Scotland. Copies are also handed out to pedestrians.
The Metro says: A baby boy who was stabbed to death days before his Christening has been pictured as his devastated family pay tribute to the ‘angel’.
The Metro says: More than 99% of pregnant women admitted to hospital with Covid-19 are unvaccinated, scientists have found.
Some of the papers feature stories on Covid passports and compulsory vaccination in the wake of tech firms such as Google requiring staff to be fully jabbed before returning to the office.
The Metro says: A socialite stole nearly £1million from art dealers to keep up her lavish lifestyle after she was cut off from her in-laws’ wealth, a court has heard.
The Metro says: A major earthquake has rocked the Alaska Peninsula, with fears that a tsunami could soon follow.
The Metro says: A Liverpool fan who suffered life-changing injuries in the Hillsborough disaster has died, 32 years after the tragedy.
“Doubly jabbly” is the Metro’s headline as the paper considers two benefits of being fully vaccinated.
The Metro says: A mum has denied murdering her daughter, 3, saying she ‘felt sick and heartbroken’ when she realised she was dead.
The Metro says: A total of 131 people have died within 28 days of a positive test in the past 24 hours.
The Metro says: The alarm was raised at 2.40am as the Roman Catholic Parish Church of St Simon caught fire.
“Too late to get the jab” is how Metro headlines the story of a vaccine sceptic from Bradford who initially refused a jab and then told doctors he wished he could “turn back time”.
Metro uses the same striking image used on several front pages, along with the headline: “Golden bawls” as it celebrates Tom Daley’s Gold medal.
The Metro says: Adam Peaty became the first British swimmer to retain an Olympic title with a characteristically dominant display in the final of the men’s 100 metres breaststroke at the Tokyo Aquatics Centre.
The Metro says: Former footballer Joey Barton has been charged with assaulting a woman.
The Metro says: An NHS trust in London has declared a ‘major incident’ after two hospital A&E departments were left partially underwater.
The Metro leads on Health Secretary Sajid Javid’s apology after he suggested people should not “cower” from coronavirus.
The Metro says: A man stabbed to death in south London last night was filming a music video when he was attacked, witnesses said.
The Metro says: The organisation representing over 130,000 rank rank-and-file police officers has said it no longer has confidence in the Home Secretary following a pay freeze.
The Metro says: A list of sectors whose workers will be exempt from self isolation rules if they are double vaccinated has been published by the Government.
The Metro offers yet another bit of rhyming wordplay based around the verb-of-the-moment with the headline “Ping in the Army”. It says one MP has called for armed forces to be deployed
UK grinds to a halt: The Metro says supermarkets and petrol stations are being forced to close due to staff shortages caused by the NHS Test and Trace system
The Metro says: Prince Harry’s memoir will focus on his mother’s death and who he believes is responsible, a royal expert has claimed.
The Metro says: Travellers returning from red list destinations face having to fork out an extra £500 to pay for their quarantine hotel stay.
The Metro says: A doctor has revealed how coronavirus patients who have not been vaccinated beg for the jab – but tells them ‘it’s too late’.