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The government's planned crackdown on recruitment gangs dominate Monday's headlines. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is due to announce new police measures today and has vowed that 'political correctness' will not stand in the way of a crackdown. This message is echoed in the Daily Telegraph, which says police have been told that "the ethnicity of grooming gangs cannot be ignored".
The Times also takes up the issue, saying that gangs have been "driven by political correctness", while the Daily Express says that women have been endangered by "wake up politics".
The Guardian examines the NHS delays which it says are leaving thousands of children facing a 'lifelong' impact on their health.
Mental health is at the center of the i, which reports on an inquiry into the transformation of NHS services into a public inquiry.
The Daily Mirror focuses on Home Secretary Suella Braverman, claiming she claimed almost £25,000 in energy bill costs at her London home.
The Sun is reporting a £250,000 bounty on the head of Thomas Cashman, who was convicted last week of the murder of nine-year-old Olivia Pratt-Korbel in Liverpool.
Parking apps are attracting the attention of the Daily Mail, which claims that more than two million people will soon be living in "parking meter wastelands" as parking meters are abandoned in favor of cashless alternatives.
A surprise production cut by oil producers of more than a million barrels a day makes the front page of the Financial Times.
And the tube is focusing on fears of delays to the 7pm ferry to Dover for the Easter holidays.
The Daily Star, meanwhile, delves into the world of AI and the troubling demand for a chatbot.
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