What the papers say: Monday's front pages

Ellen O'Donoghue
Rory McIlroy's Masters win dominates Irish front pages on Monday.
The Irish Times lead with stories about the EU and US meeting for talks amid rising trade uncertainty, Rory McIlroy completing the Grand Slam after his Masters win in Augusta, and Ireland ing a European maritime security network.
The Irish Examiner lead with stories about prison staff being at high risk due to overcrowding, Russian missiles killing 32 people on their way to church in Ukraine, Ireland ing an alliance of nations that shares intelligence and information on potential threats in EU sea waters, and Apple seeking 300 parking spaces, citing concerns about poor public transport and delays to major transport projects.
The Echo lead with a story about Cork businesses being confident about increasing their profits and adding to their workforces despite global uncertainty prompted by Donald Trump's tariffs, alongside a story about 32 families in Cork receiving notification that their child's past hip surgery was under review.
The Irish Independent lead with a story about experts from key state agencies being redeployed from their day jobs to try and help the government unblock major infrastructure projects that were stalled.
The Herald lead with a story about an ongoing feud in Limerick city being linked to shots being fired at a house and the firebombing of a car.
The Irish Daily Mail lead with Rory McIlroy's Masters win and a story about Ireland ing a new European naval alliance, which is causing concern over neutrality.
The Belfast Telegraph and Irish Daily Star both lead with Rory McIlroy's Masters win in Augusta.