Front pages consider censorship

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Two Sunday papers have devoted their front pages to a film called SS Experiment Camp, which features Nazism and sexual violence.

The Sunday Times says it was one of a clutch of violent films banned 20 years ago which are now on general release.

It says Britain's film censors argue sensibilities to on-screen violence have changed.

The Sunday Express demanded action to sweep such films, which it called "filth", "off our shelves".

Village schools

A Sunday Telegraph reporter claims he was offered several children for sale by their parents in Nigeria.

The investigation suggested that once traffickers bring the children into Britain they are used to obtain fraudulent benefits or are put to work.

The Observer leads on a different story about children with campaigners warning that hundreds of village schools in England and Wales are facing closure.

It says MPs blame a switch of money from shire counties to inner cities.

National hero

"Le Rogue Trader" Jerome Kerviel continues to feature in many of the Sunday papers with some casting him as an unlikely and unwitting hero.

The Independent on Sunday declares he is the man who accidentally saved the world from recession.

It says his actions sparked off a serious of events which lead to the US Federal Reserve cutting interest rates.

The Observer reports that to millions of his compatriots in France, he is a national hero who took on the system.

Unpatriotic

The News of the World showcases an interview with the Girls Aloud singer Cheryl Cole - wife of Chelsea and England footballer Ashley Cole.

Mrs Cole tells the paper she has vowed to stand by him for "better or worse".

The Mail on Sunday says Gordon Brown personally approved a decision to remove the Britannia symbol from 50p coins when he was Chancellor.

This, it believes, makes a nonsense of his declarations of patriotism.