Revelations in a new book saying Queen Camilla was the victim of an attempted indecent assault as a teenager dominate Monday's papers. The Daily Mail leads with the detail that the future Queen fought off her attacker on a train by "hitting him with her shoe". Also splashed on the paper is Labour's "civil war", as it features shadow cabinet minister Alex Burghart saying senior figures in the party are more concerned with "jockeying" to take over from Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer than dealing with problems facing the country.
The Daily Telegraph headlines with "Queen fought off sex attacker". The paper says the incident, detailed in Power and the Palace by Valentine Low, occurred when the Queen was "16 or 17". The Telegraph adds that the episode was relayed by the Queen to former PM Boris Johnson in 2008.
"Camilla whacked groper in goolies" is the Sun's take. The paper notes the Queen's campaign for victims and survivors of sexual and domestic abuse, and features a quote from the book of her saying she defended herself by doing "what my mother taught me to".
The Times leads with a report that says the UK withdrawing from the European Convention on Human Rights will not jeopardise peace in Northern Ireland. The paper says the study by the Policy Exchange think tank says the argument is "entirely groundless". Also front and centre is some "black magic" brought by actress Alicia Vikander, as she poses on the red carpet at the Venice Film Festival.
Sir Keir has vowed to tackle Reform UK leader Nigel Farage's "scare tactics", repots the Daily Mirror. The paper says the PM is ready with a range of policices that "offer genuine hope" and accuses Farage of "talking down" to the British people. Sharing the top spot is Liverpool's "stunner" of a win over Arsenal, after a "hotshot" made by Dominik Szoboszlai.
"The deadly war on journalism in Gaza" leads the Guardian, as the paper fills its front page with pictures of some of the reporters killed in the region during the3 conflict with Israel. A special report by the Guardian says at least 189 journalists have been killed in 22 months in Gaza. Alongside, the paper reports doctors have found a drug that is better than aspirin at preventing heart attacks and strokes. It says the "stunning" discovery could transform health guidelines worldwide.
EU chief Ursula von der Leyen says Europe is laying the "road map" for deploying troops in Ukraine, according to the Financial Times. In an interview with the paper, von der Leyen says European capitals are working on "pretty precise plans" for potential military deployments to support Kyiv as part of post-conflict security guarantees. Filling the top picture spot is the protests in Indonesia as people continue express their "rage at MPs" over politicians' salary perks.
The Metro declares a "rail tickets revolution", as the trialling of a pay-as-you-go ticketing app for passengers starts on Monday in England. The paper says the system which allows people to check in and out of rail journeys using an app on their phone could make travel "simpler and cheaper". Elsewhere, the Metro teases a three-way "battle of the Bonds" between actors Aaron Taylor Johnson, Callum Turner and Jacob Elordi.
The Daily Express announces their new campaign to "halt the shoplifting crisis" costing stores "more than £2.2bn a year". The paper is demanding that police attend every reported theft as it says "opportunistic stealing sprees" have soared to record levels.
Finally, the Daily Star announces "Nessi's back!" as it reports on what it says is a new sighting of the Loch Ness monster. The paper dubs the return of "Britain's fave monster" as the "best in 30 years".