What the papers say: Tuesday's front pages

Tomas Doherty
A range of stories feature across the front pages of Tuesday's newspapers, including the incident in Liverpool that saw a car plough into a crowd of football fans.
The Irish Times reports that a consultant working at Children’s Health Ireland (CHI) who was at the centre of an internal review for allegedly referring public patients to his own weekend clinic did not face disciplinary action.
Gardaí are being rostered to do shifts at a Cork City hospital due to escalating levels of violence towards frontline staff, according to the Irish Examiner.
The Irish Independent says a now-suspended garda was allegedly scammed on the dark web after trying to hire a hitman.
The Irish Daily Mail, Irish Daily Mirror and The Herald report from the scene in Liverpool after a car drove into a crowd of football fans.
The Irish Daily Star has another interview with the "self-confessed" murder suspect in the Michael Gaine case.
The Belfast Telegraph reveals that the British prime minister's national security adviser held secret talks with a controversial loyalist figure.
The Irish News gives an update on the latest situation in Gaza after Israeli strikes killed dozens of people.
The Echo reports that a enger pulled a knife on a Cork taxi driver during a hijacking.