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Newspaper headlines: 'Chinese spy arrest' and 'hell on earth' after quake

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Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

A woman outside her ruined home in Marrakesh following Friday's earthquake

pictures a distressed woman in Morocco, surrounded by the ruins of her home in Marrakesh, destroyed in Friday night's deadly earthquake.

, alongside a terrified child being carried to safety in the southern city of Ouarzazate.

in hotel rooms as the tremors shook buildings. have continued to leave many families sleeping on the streets.

Many papers lead on the capture of the terror fugitive, Daniel Khalife.

"I'll Escape Just Watch Me" . It claims he had boasted to prison wardens about his plan to flee jail.

after security forces bugged the phones of people linked to him. The paper reports that the surveillance led dozens of officers to a house in Richmond, in south-west London, where they missed him - possibly by minutes.

, the former soldier chuckled as the four-day manhunt ended. It quotes one eyewitness as saying that Mr Khalife laughed while insisting that he did nothing wrong.

, households could face bills of more than £2,000 to shut down Britain's gas grid. An initial report from The National Infrastructure Commission suggests that decommissioning the grid could cost the UK £65bn. The paper says households could be left to pay through higher energy bills or taxes, because there is no provision for the expense in current government budgets. The Telegraph says energy companies are not obliged to cover the costs either.

, the new chairman of NatWest is facing scrutiny over his former role with the British arm of a Saudi company. There is no suggestion of wrongdoing by Rick Haythornthwaite, but the paper says allegations against PetroSaudi raise questions about his judgment. A source close to Mr Haythornthwaite says he was never a director or "privy to the action of the owners".

In an apparent security threat, , Temu, could be spying on UK customers. The paper quotes the Conservative MP Sir Iain Duncan Smith warning that Temu, and similar Chinese companies, "are data harvesters and want your private details". The paper says security experts fear such apps may be mining customers' data for blackmail purposes, and identity theft.

, the former Prime Minister Liz Truss, says she acknowledges she "made some mistakes" during her short-lived premiership, but that "the problem was not enough support for Conservative ideas". In a sit-down interview, she says she no longer speaks to Kwasi Kwarteng, who she sacked as Chancellor following the disastrous mini budget. The paper says Ms Truss's political ambitions remain undimmed and that she does not rule out a comeback.

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