What the papers say: Friday's front pages

ireland
What The Papers Say: Friday's Front Pages
Friday's front pages.
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A man being charged with the attempted murder of three children and assault of a care worker in Parnell Square in Dublin, and the mass shooting in Prague, are the main stories on Friday's front pages.

The incident in Parnell Square is the main story in The Irish Times, along with the Prague shooting.

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The Irish Examiner leads with comments from the knife attack accused, Riad Bouchaker (50), who said "I am a sick person".

A new extortion law will target bogus planning objectors, the Irish Independent reports.

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The Echo leads with a story on a scheme that will see drug users trained to treat overdoses.

Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald plans to 'harden' the party's immigration policy, according to the Irish Daily Mail.

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The Herald also leads with the knife attack in Parnell Square.

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The Belfast Telegraph leads with a story on a row over the future over a former UTV building.

The mass shooting in Prague and calls for reform on assisted dying feature among the stories on the front of Britain’s newspapers on Friday.

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The Independent and the Metro lead with the worst ever mass shooting in the Czech Republic after a gunman killed 15 people and injured more than 30 in Prague.

The Daily Express continues its coverage of Dame Esther Rantzen and her plea to change laws surrounding assisted dying, saying “this cruelty must stop”.

The Daily Mail asks whether the tide is turning on assisted dying after Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer showed his support for legalising assisted dying.

British chancellor Jeremy Hunt predicts a “lift in economic mood”, raising the prospect that the Bank of England will reduce interest rates in 2024, according to the Financial Times.

The Times reports one in eight casualty patients spend more than an hour waiting outside emergency departments in ambulances.

The Telegraph says Queen Elizabeth was persuaded to spend her last days in Balmoral as the royal family made preparations for her death.

Christmas travel chaos is at the front of the i, with storm and strikes hitting travellers across “rail, roads, air and sea”.

The Daily Mirror leads with a letter from a man who is suspected of murdering Suzy Lamplugh, who “protests his innocence”.

The Guardian reveals a “huge rise” in people admitted to hospital with malnutrition and nutritional deficiencies.

The Sun leads with a story on Alex Batty, 17, who told the publication why he left his mum and grandad when he was 11-years-old.

And the Daily Star reports on the Prince of Wales’ fingers, and how he has not inherited the King Charles' “unfeasibly large fingers”.

The US is set to back a UN resolution on aid for Gaza, The New York Times reports.

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