What the papers say: Monday's front pages

A wide range of stories feature on Monday's front pages, including the ongoing unrest in the Middle East.
What the papers say: Monday's front pages

Ellen O'Donoghue

A wide range of stories feature on Monday's front pages, including the ongoing unrest in the Middle East.

The Irish Times lead with Israel and Iran continuing to exchange attacks, the Spiritans head making a public commitment to pay redress to school abuse survivors, and An Garda Síochána deciding not to upgrade any further unsolved missing-persons cases to murder inquiries.

The Irish Examiner lead with new EU laws keeping children safer online, cans and bottles still littering the streets, the Cork-Limerick motorway route, and Simon Harris joining the Israel-Iran de-escalation discussion.

The Echo lead with Cork city centre being rated as clean, and hundreds attending a mussel farm protest.

The Irish Daily Mirror lead with the potential of an all-out war between Israel and Iran.

The Irish Independent lead with more than half of Irish eight-year-olds from less advantaged areas owning a smartphone.

The Belfast Telegraph lead with an ongoing rift between the DUP leadership and its councillors.

The Herald lead with gardaí investigating if the Carlow gunman saved a manifesto on a USB stick.

The Irish Daily Mail lead with the Education Minister being warned that tools to stop students cheating through artificial intelligence do not work.

The Irish Daily Star lead with gardaí arresting the suspect in the Annie McCarrick murder after his own brother gave them 'vital information'.

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