What the papers say: Tuesday's front pages

Tuesday’s front pages.
What the papers say: Tuesday's front pages

Reviews into the delivery of nine babies at Portiuncula University Hospital (PUH), and ongoing power outages due to Storm Éowyn are among the stories that feature on Tuesday's front pages. 

The Irish Times leads with the external review of births at Portiuncula University Hospital in Co Galway.

The Irish Examiner leads with a story on ongoing power outages after Storm Éowyn, with 100,000 set to be without electricity for another week.

The Irish Independent also leads with the hospital review, which includes two stillbirths.

The Echo leads with a story on Cork TDs calling for a 'radical housing reset'.

The Irish Sun leads with a story on sacked Premier League referee David Coote coming out as gay, as he said he was afraid to reveal his sexuality in the 'macho' football world.

The Irish Daily Mail leads with a story on opposition politicans claiming the Government waited too long to request EU aid after Storm Éowyn.

The Irish Daily Star also leads with the power outages.

The Herald leads with a story on the murder of Gareth Hutch.

In the North, the Belfast Telegraph leads with a story on power outages.

The Irish News leads with a story on a man who died of carbon monoxide poisoning amid warnings over the use of generators.

Events marking the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz feature across several of Tuesday’s UK newspaper front pages.

The Daily Mirror carries a full-page picture of 95-year-old survivor Stanislaw Zalewski at a ceremony at the former camp with the message “It is our duty to remember”.

The same image features on the front of the Daily Express, alongside a picture of Britain's King Charles wiping his eyes during the ceremony.

Charles appears on the front of the Daily Mail, alongside the Princess of Wales lighting a candle in London, as it says “eyewitnesses to history’s greatest abomination” gathered for the anniversary, while the Metro says the returning survivors show that “in a place of no hope, there is always hope”.

The Times also carries a picture of Mr Zalewski, alongside a lead which says a Home Office review has called for changes in the way extremism is approached in the UK amid fears of two-tier policing.

Alongside a picture of the Princess of Wales lighting a candle during a Holocaust Memorial Day service, The Daily Telegraph leads on the same report, saying it recommends police should record more non-crime hate incidents.

The Independent gives its front page over to a picture of Palestinians heading back to Gaza for the first time in more than a year as part of a “long walk home” following the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas.

The launch of a Chinese chatbot occupies several papers, The Guardian says DeepSeek “shook faith” in the US artificial intelligence boom and saw tech stocks plummet, a story echoed by the Financial Times.

The Daily Star has its own spin on the story, labelling the conflict between the new and existing technology as the “War of the psycho scumbag chatbots”.

Former Premier League referee David Coote tells The Sun he was too scared to come out as gay while still in the “macho world”.

The New York Times leads with a story on the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz.

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