成人快手

Newspaper review: Libya resolution divides opinion

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Papers

The looming prospect of military action against Col Gaddafi's forces makes some front pages - although the UN vote came too late for the earlier editions.

, which adds "RAF top guns" could go into action as early as today.

The Independent says it was .

The Daily Telegraph's Richard Spencer says .

The Guardian says ".

But its writer Simon Tisdall has misgivings about intervention, saying "disaster is... one possible outcome".

Patrick Cockburn, in the Independent, says .

In the Financial Times, Max Hastings says it would be "madness" to commit forces to destroy Colonel Gaddafi, with no notion of what would follow.

Turning to Japan, the FT says workers at the Fukushima nuclear plant have made "little tangible progress".

With many embassies advising citizens to leave Tokyo, one diplomat tells the paper Japan is being seen as "incompetent" or even "untrustworthy".

Almost a as heating fuel and medical supplies run out, says the Guardian.

One woman, 80, tells the Mirror in 1945.

Yesterday's is the main news in the Daily Mail.

It says critics view it as "further evidence that banks [are] divorced from reality". The Mirror calls the RBS chief's 拢7.7m pay package "obscene".

The Daily Express and Telegraph report on an agent's bid to sell a house by saying buyers could .

He says he was referring to the large rear garden but neighbours complained.

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