What the Sunday papers say

Related tags Closed-circuit television

The Sunday TelegraphBreath test machines are to be installed in hundreds of pubs across Britain so that drinkers can check if they are over the...

The Sunday Telegraph

  • Breath test machines are to be installed in hundreds of pubs across Britain so that drinkers can check if they are over the drink-drive limit. Click here to read more on thePublican.com.

The Sunday Times

  • Martin Grant, former boss of Swallow, the now defunct brewery and hotels group, is to become chief executive of RoadChef, the motorway service-station chain. Click here to read more on thePublican.com.

The Sunday Times publishes its annual list of Britain's wealthiest. A number of industry names such as Tim Martin and Hugh Osmond, made it. Click hereto see the list in full.

Children living in the suburbs are more likely to drink alcohol than their peers in inner cities, researchers have found.

People in Britain are monitored by surveillance cameras more than anybody else in the world, according to research. There are believed to be more than four million closed-circuit television (CCTV) cameras - one for every 14 people in the country.

The Mail on Sunday

  • More conventional working hours for MPs is turning Britain's politicians into heavy-drinking nervous wrecks who are so stressed they have even lost their appetite for sex, it has been claimed.

Police have launched a fresh crackdown on drink-driving that could treble the number of convictions. Officers using sophisticated new equipment will be able to tell with one roadside test whether a driver is over the limit.

Cadbury Schweppes faces a legal battle over a "tainted" £93m contract to provide fruit juices to New York's 1,200 schools.

Tea at the Ritz is to be abolished in a radical overhaul of London's grandest hotel.

The Sunday Express

  • Pub landlord Tony Bennett, who fought to open late on St George's day has won worldwide support - letters, cards and e-mails, from the USA to Japan - as he fights to make the day of the patron saint of England a national holiday.

The Independent on Sunday

  • The illegal import of alcohol, drugs and cigarettes is the third biggest crime in the UK, behind organised crime and fraud. Smuggling rings cost the government £2.5bn a year in lost revenue.

Around 90 people will lose their jobs after Diageo announced the closure of its London brewery. Production of Guinness will switch back to Ireland. Click here to read more on thePublican.com.

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