Further claims of prison bugging

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Claims over the extent of the bugging going on in British prisons are aired in a Daily Telegraph exclusive.

The paper reports on what it says is a nationwide policy.

According to a "whistleblower" hundreds of lawyers and prison visitors have been secretly recorded, often through listening devices in tables.

Meanwhile, the Daily Mail and the Guardian say a driver who took Sinn Fein president Gerry Adams around Northern Ireland has been identified as a British spy.

Archbishop pressure

The Mail and the Times say that calls are growing for the Archbishop of Canterbury to resign.

As the Times sees it, he is facing a crisis of confidence in his leadership.

The Independent says Dr Williams should have known that his intervention in the debate on Muslim Sharia law would be interpreted as condoning brutal systems.

The Daily Mirror says that Heather Mills has made a plea to her estranged husband Sir Paul McCartney for a £10m divorce settlement.

It claims that in return, Ms Mills will cease to make damaging claims about the former Beatle.

According to the Financial Times people who are late paying their mobile phone bills or forget to settle even a minor credit card payment are being blacklisted.

Animal antics

The Independent reports on how Russia's President Vladimir Putin has accused the West of launching a new arms race.

He said that Moscow has no choice but to retaliate, and that Russia would develop newer, more modern weapons.

The Sun reports how a tourist guide has been pulped after describing the Duke of Wellington crossing the Channel in 1066 to fight the Battle of Hastings.

The howler came to light after the guide to the town of Battle in East Sussex was distributed to advertisers and the local council.

The Mirror carries a photograph of a rare hybrid animal that is half goat, half sheep.

Nicknamed a 'Geep', it is the result of a goat mating with a sheep.