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Last Updated: Sunday, 13 July, 2003, 12:20 GMT 13:20 UK
What the Scottish Sunday papers say
Big Brother winner Cameron Stout has launched a desperate search for a bride, reports the Sunday Mail.

The News of the World claims that TV presenter John Fashanu has admitted rigging football matches.

Scotland on Sunday reports that John Swinney's command of the Scottish National Paper is under threat after several Nationalist MSPs openly backed a leadership challenge.

The paper also writes that speeding tickets and parking fines are set to rise by £35 to pay for compensation to victims of crime, under secret plans being considered by the government.

Director-general of the BBC, Greg Dyke, has told senior executives at the corporation that he will resign rather than see its independence compromised by the government's "revenge" for the BBC's questioning of its line on Iraq, reports the Sunday Herald.

The Sunday Times Scotland says Scottish police are attempting to recruit officers from across the world in a bid to see off a chronic staffing crisis.

The head of the Prison Service in England and Wales has been ordered to explain to thte Home Secretary why a burgular shot by farmer Tony Martin was released early, reports the Sunday Post.

The Scottish Daily Mail reports that the scandal of David Kelly's suicide threatens to split the Cabinet after it emerged his wife may have kept a record of his final hours.

The Scottish Daily Express says that the Labour Party was at war with itself on Saturday after followers Tony Blair launched an attack on the Chancellor.

Big Brother winner Cameron said he cannot wait to get married and wants to find a virgin bride, reports the Sunday Mirror.

The Observer leads with the David Kelly story, claiming he spoke openly to fellow members of a religious sect about his concerns over the 'interpretation' of intelligence material in the government's weapons of mass destruction dossier.

The Independent on Sunday also leads with the Kelly story, saying ministers have threatened revenge on the BBC.




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