What the papers say: Monday's front pages

ireland
What The Papers Say: Monday's Front Pages
A preview of the main stories in Monday's papers.
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The fallout from the Dublin riots continues on the front pages of Monday's papers.

The Irish Times report that gardaí plan large-scale arrests of the ringleaders of the Dublin riots. The front page also covers Leo Varadkar defending his tweet on the release of Emily Hand.

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The Irish Examiner reports facial recognition technology is set to be fast tracked after the Dublin riots.

The Echo leads with the opening of the MacCurtain street public transport improvement scheme, which was opened by Micheál Martin.

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The Irish Daily Mail also leads with the introduction of facial recognition technology after the riots in Dublin last Thursday.

Both the Irish Daily Mirror and the Irish Daily Star lead with the release of Emily Hand, after spending 50 days held by Hamas.

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British papers

Tributes to former England coach Terry Venables, the release of hostages in the Middle East and more headaches for the Conservative government feature on the front of Monday’s newspaper front pages.

The Daily Mirror describes Terry Venables, who guided England to the brink of the Euro 96 final at Wembley, as “the great showman” while The Sun calls him “one Tel of a fella”.

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The Metro and the Daily Star  both bid farewell to El Tel who died on Saturday, aged 80.

The Guardian and the Financial Times focus on the Middle East as Hamas and Israel continue their truce.

The Times also focuses on the hostage release as it concentrates on the release of a four-year-old orphan.

The Daily Telegraph reveals a deal between the Prime Minister and former Home Secretary Suella Braverman over migrants which it says she feels he failed to stick to.

The i splashes with the tax predicament faced by millions of Britons, only days after Chancellor Jeremy Hunt handed down his autumn statement.

The Daily Express has urged the Duke of Sussex to defend the royal family as journalist Omid Scobie prepares to release his book on the goings on at Buckingham Palace on Tuesday.

The Daily Mail’s front page looked at Sunday’s rally in Central London against antisemitism, with the headline: “No war cries, no angry chants, just solidarity with UK’s fearful Jews”.

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