Good morning, the following are the top stories in Malta's Sunday newspapers.

The Sunday Times of Malta reports that a New Zealand firm tasked with auditing
Konrad Mizzi’s and Keith Schembri’s offshore structures was provided with “little
information” to work with, new leaked e-mails suggest.

It also reports that a move to centralise all State schools’ photocopying at the government printing press has teachers fearing a “bureaucratic nightmare”

The Malta Independent on Sunday says the Building Regulation office has no staff on weekends to report and monitor building illegalities. It also says Adrian Delia will spell out his vision for the country when he addresses the PN general council on Sunday. 

MaltaToday says controlled rents will rise according to property value in proposed changes to the rental law. It also reports that Maltese is the spoken language of choice for the majority.  

It-Torċa reports on the plight of three workers who were allegedly forced to resign after developing terminal illness. 

Il-Mument says inefficiency at Gozo Channel is causing hardship, particularly to vulnerable people. It also reports speeches from the PN general council. General Secretary Clyde Puli said the PN is making concrete changes, not cosmetic ones. Deputy leader Robert Arrigo said the PN would continue to be close to the people.  

KullĦadd says a group within the PN wants to oust Robert Arrigo from his position as PN deputy leader for party affairs. 

Illum quotes a medical professor saying Malta is still 30 years back in IVF. 

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