Newspaper headlines: Europe's most-wanted man 'slipped off radar' By BBC News

Staff Published duration 22 December 2016

image copyright German Federal Police image caption Anis Amri is suspected of carrying out the Berlin lorry attack

The papers are once again dominated by coverage of the Berlin lorry attack.

The main suspect, Anis Amri, stares out from the front of the Guardian , which has a headline dubbing him "the one who got away".

The paper says Germany's security services are under intense pressure to explain how the Tunisian, who had been under covert surveillance for several months, appeared to fall through the cracks.

A similar image of Amri is used by the Times

His father in Tunisia tells the paper he was "a violent, drug-taking adolescent".

The front of the Financial Times features photos of what initially appear to be four different men - but are all Amri, whom it describes as the "terror suspect with many faces".

The Sun is among those to warn of potentially dire consequences following the European Court of Justice ruling that Britain's surveillance regime is unlawful.

It says there are fears such "these body blows" to the security techniques could cost lives.

The i says the ruling could prove inconsequential after Brexit.

But the Financial Times believes it still poses a problem for the government because the EU will only share personal data with countries that comply with its privacy rules.

Chief advisers

It says the money will be a boost for 600,000 thousand rural homes.

Meanwhile, figures showing that, in the words of its headline, "May's two chief advisers earn almost the same as she does" attract the attention of the Times.

The joint chiefs of staff in Downing Street, Nick Timothy and Fiona Hill, are paid £140,000 a year, just 6% less the prime minister and almost as much as other cabinet ministers.

It says government data also shows more than 400 civil servants are paid over £150,000 a year.

image caption Mince pies and carols anyone?

The Sun reports that "panicked ministers" are considering laying on hundreds of buses to beat next month's week-long strike by Southern Rail drivers.

Sources, it says, claim school children will be given priority over commuters.

Telegraph cartoonist Matt pictures the Three Kings heading towards a star - on the top deck of a replacement bus service.