Newspaper headlines: 'Baby BoJoy' and Captain Tom's 100th birthday By BBC News

Staff Published duration 30 April

image copyright Downing Street image caption Boris Johnson arrives back in Downing Street after the birth of his son on Wednesday

The Guardian says hospital leaders have launched what it calls a "strident attack" on the government's coronavirus testing strategy.

NHS Providers, which represent trusts, has expressed their growing frustration. It dismisses the daily 100,000 test target - which the paper expects to be missed by a wide margin - as a "red herring".

The Independent examines the wisdom of Health Secretary Matt Hancock, giving himself what it calls this " remarkable statistical rod for his back ".

But the Daily Mail suggests that missing the self-imposed target does matter, insisting that it raises " questions of confidence and trust " if a minister makes a promise and fails to keep it.

Both the Daily Telegraph and the Financial Times report that Business Secretary Alok Sharma is looking at how to get Britain back to work safely. The FT says that the minister is aiming to produce 10 papers by the weekend giving advice to employers.

Clear guidance is to be welcomed, the head of the CBI employers' group, Carolyn Fairbairn, tells the FT, while noting that the hospitality sector has little hope of renewed activity until the Autumn.

The FT quotes Mr Martin as saying it was " complete cobblers " to suggest he had firm plans.

The Times puts forward the prediction that air passengers could wait for up to four hours to board planes as they undergo medical checks. Analysts have forecast that the flight experience could be "very uncomfortable" for up to five years, with travellers paying inflated ticket prices and facing a greatly reduced schedule.

But an expert from Imperial College tells the Times that the "interpretation of the findings is open to question".

'Infectious joy'

And finally, pictures of a smiling Boris Johnson back in Downing Street after the birth of his son appear on many of the front pages.

The Daily Telegraph describes his "crumpled features" being "illuminated with...infectious joy," which it suggests " felt like a balm for the soul ".

The Times suggests that despite the pandemic the child is "lucky" and "Britain in 2020 is an excellent place and time to enter the world."

image copyright PA Media image caption Captain Tom initially set out to raise £1,000 for the NHS but has since raised nearly £30m