Road charges make the headlines

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The papers cover the ongoing debate about plans to try out pay-as-you-drive road charges.

The Daily Mail says the Downing Street website crashed under the weight of protest, as objectors added their names to an online petition.

The Independent says it is "vital" for environmental reasons that people get out of their cars and off the roads.

It urges ministers not to be swayed by the petition, but is also wary of this "ambitious technological solution".

The Financial Times says it has seen a European Union document admitting the international community has failed to contain Iran's nuclear programme.

The resulting warning is that nothing can now be done to prevent Iran making a nuclear bomb.

Food scare

According to the Guardian, Cadbury faces prosecution over the scare last year, when bars of chocolate were contaminated with salmonella.

Dozens of people became ill and more than one million bars were withdrawn.

Claims that a new drug for breast cancer could save the lives of more than 1,000 women a year are covered by many of the papers.

The Times says exemestane produced "a dramatic fall in death rates" in a study of almost 5,000 women by Cancer Research UK and drug makers Pfizer.

The Sun and the Mirror both throw their weight behind the idea that England might host the World Cup in 2018.

The Sun says England must "bring world soccer home - where it belongs".

Giant Jesus

The Daily Express covers the story of a 10 foot high sculpture of Jesus at the Liverpool Academy of Arts.

Visitors to the gallery have been falling to their knees in prayer or fleeing in terror after claiming to see sparks coming from Christ's eyes.

And the Daily Telegraph tells the tale of a burglar who was caught by police when he left his photograph at the scene of the crime.

He left it on his mobile phone, which he dropped at a Buckinghamshire house.