Newspaper review: Events in Egypt remain the focus

Events in the Middle East are again very much the focus for the papers.

The and the talk of Egypt's President Mubarak being "on the brink" after the announcement by the army that it would not use force against protesters.

The leading opposition figure, Mohamed ElBaradei, has been .

The paper calls him "the man who would be president, Egypt's saviour in waiting".

Tax rises

There is an air of .

It follows estimates that 750,000 more people will find themselves paying 40% income tax from April.

The paper says it pointed out in post-Budget analysis that the measures would fall most heavily on middle-to-upper income families with children.

According to a if you are middle class you would have been better off living in the high-tax 1970s than you are now.

Watchdog review

Ofsted is to be stripped of the power to scrutinise official reports into the suspicious deaths of children, .

The paper says it is one of a number of changes being made as a result of the Baby P case in Haringey, north London.

The area's children's services had been given top marks by Ofsted.

A report will apparently say Ofsted is not equipped to evaluate serious case reviews because its approach is too formulaic and bureaucratic.

'Madness' returns

a "January splurge" by top clubs put at 拢200m.

It highlights the transfers of Fernando Torres to Chelsea for 拢50m and Andy Carroll to Liverpool for 拢35m.

According to "stunned recession-hit Brits".

The "the day the madness returned to football".

The is giving a V-sign to the age of austerity.