Papers cover Iraqi trial acquittal

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/uk/6363767.stm

Version 0 of 1.

The acquittal of Colonel Jorge Mendonca on charges relating to the alleged mistreatment of Iraqi civilians is the main story for several papers.

The Sun has the headline: "Twenty million pound war crime farce".

According to the Daily Telegraph, the process ended in a costly and embarrassing failure for the military's high command.

The Guardian claims the food industry's new nutrition labelling scheme makes products look healthier than they are.

The Times has a report that Roman Catholicism is set to become the dominant religion in Britain for the first time since the Reformation.

This is because of a massive amount of migration from Catholic countries across the world.

Matthews speaks

The Mirror has an interview with the turkey firm boss Bernard Matthews, his first since the bird flu crisis broke.

He strongly denies allegations that there may have been attempts to mask his company's links to Hungary, which has also had outbreaks of bird flu.

The Independent covers the launch of a campaign against the Trident nuclear deterrent by leading public figures.

It features some of the more than 80 people who have signed an open letter, along with the headline: "Not in our name".

The Daily Express says road signs have been put up in Polish around the Cheshire-Shropshire border.

It says the notices, next to English signs, were put up to help local Polish drivers follow diversions.

Viagra fever

The papers cover the sale of Viagra over the counter for the first time - a service launched on Valentine's Day at three Boots stores in Manchester.

Never have so many men been so keen to get to a pharmacy, says the Times.

The Daily Star has Brits coverage and "all the stuff you didn't see on telly" while the Telegraph promises "the winners, the losers and the fashion".

The Sun reports that guests took home a £15,000 goodie bag with items including a Nintendo Wii games console.