Description
No single story dominates the front pages of the Good Friday newspapers with a variety of different touches, though one Christmas tradition makes several headlines. The Sun adds a stay-at-home showdown to the mix for what it calls "Bad Friday". The Daily Mirror finds at least one silver lining for the bank holiday weekend in the form of the weather.
US President Joe Biden's visit to Northern Ireland on the anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement makes the front page of the Daily Telegraph with warnings of attacks on police by dissident Republicans.
The Telegraph is also presenting possible reparations after the king ordered an inquiry into the royal family's links to the slave trade, a story that dominates coverage in the Daily Mail.
This story also appears in The Guardian, which focuses on a call from the Lord Speaker for more experts to be appointed to the House of Lords, rather than government allies.
The Times anticipates next week's young doctors' strike and warns that it could "saturate" A&E departments.
Ukraine is at the center of concern for the Daily Express, which is reporting that the war-torn country's ambassador to the UK insists it will fight to the "last man" rather than negotiate with Russia.
For the second day in a row, the i leads in smart highways as it signals that pressure is mounting to kill the entire network.
And the Daily Star reports that Italy is trying to ban the English words and insists on the correct pronunciation of bruschetta.
PA files
Access