What the papers say: Tuesday's front pages

Here are the stories making headlines this Tuesday.
What the papers say: Tuesday's front pages

US president Donald Trump’s meeting with French president Emmanuel Macron and the ongoing diplomacy over Ukraine feature on the front pages of Tuesday’s newspapers.

The Irish Times reports that Ukraine urged the West to unite as it marked three years of all-out war with Russia and heard pledges of solidarity from European leaders, amid tension with Washington and Kremlin praise for US president Donald Trump.

The Irish Examiner highlights Donald Trump's claim that Russian president Vladimir Putin told him Russia would accept European peacekeepers in Ukraine.

More inmates are being released early from prison due to overcrowded cells, the Irish Independent reports.

The Irish Daily Mail reveals that foreign investment in apartment construction in Ireland has plummeted.

The young boy who died in a car crash at the weekend made a video for his father just days beforehand, the Irish Daily Mirror reports.

The Herald says the six men found guilty of the murder of steakhouse gunman Tristan Sherry will spend their time in jail together.

The Belfast Telegraph has the latest on the shooting of a dissident republican in west Belfast.

On the British front pages, The Guardian leads on Mr Trump saying Russia is willing to accept a European peacekeeping force in Ukraine as part of a ceasefire deal.

The Times leads with its coverage of the meeting between Mr Trump and Mr Macron at the White House to discuss peace and tariffs.

The Independent headline says Ukraine has offered an olive branch to Donald Trump in the form of a minerals deal,  with the European leader suggesting the two nations are close to an agreement.

The Financial Times writes that the British finance minister Rachel Reeves is set to meet her European counterparts for “ground-breaking” defence talks later this week.

The Sun and Daily Mail splash on 19-year-old killer Nicholas Prosper as the teenager faces sentencing next month for the murder of his family – his mother Juliana, 48, his brother Kyle, 16, and his little 13-year-old sister Giselle.

The Metro reports on a change in legislation that will stop sex offenders from being able to legally change their names to avoid detection

Lastly, the Daily Star writes that a nuclear strike may be the only way to stop an asteroid which may be on a collision course with Earth.

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