Newspaper headlines: Fatal stabbing, gag orders and Brexiteer 'tests' By BBC News

Staff Published duration 3 March 2019

image copyright PA image caption Jodie was found dead in a park in Romford on Friday night

Most of the front pages have pictures of Jodie Chesney, the 17-year-old girl stabbed to death in east London.

Her murder is the main story for the Mail on Sunday , the Sunday Express and the Sun on Sunday.

"Knifed in the back and left to die", is the headline in the Sunday Express.

It describes Jodie as a model student and a Scout with a bright future.

The Mail on Sunday reports that she was attacked as she sat on a park bench with her boyfriend.

Detectives are understood to be bewildered by any possible motive for the killing and are hunting two men seen fleeing the area, the paper adds.

There are pictures of Jodie posing in her Scout uniform outside 10 Downing Street on Remembrance Sunday last year.

Later the same day, the Sun on Sunday reports, she lined the walkway of the Chelsea Pensioners as they came on stage at the Royal Albert Hall for the Festival of Remembrance broadcast on BBC One.

image copyright PA image caption The Telegraph has campaigned for a change to the law after an investigation into Sir Philip Green

It says the move comes after the retail tycoon, Sir Philip Green, used non-disclosure agreements to silence and pay off at least five members of staff who accused him of sexual harassment and racism.

The paper, which campaigned for a change in the law, welcomes the review but says the misuse of the agreements should be a criminal offence rather than put into civil law.

The Observer says it has seen internal emails showing that members of Labour's high command opposed recommendations to suspend several party activists accused of anti-Semitism.

It says the correspondence, dating from March to May last year, covers a period immediately after Jeremy Corbyn vowed to have "zero tolerance for anti-Semites".

A party source tells the paper the cases were a hangover from the previous process, which the general secretary, Jennie Formby, overhauled when she took up her post.

image copyright Reuters image caption The Labour leader has previously vowed to have "zero tolerance for anti-Semites"

According to the Sunday People's main story, violent "county lines" gangs - who move heroin and crack cocaine from cities to provincial towns - are forcing vulnerable children to pose as drivers of takeaway delivery meals while pushing drugs.

A children's charity tells the paper that the gangs, who manage their networks using mobile phone hotlines, are stealing drivers' bags and branded clothing so they look like delivery drivers when they go around on mopeds.