What the papers say: Thursday's front pages

Israel said it remained committed to the Gaza ceasefire framework yesterday despite killing more than 100 people in strikes across the enclave, The Irish Times reports.
What the papers say: Thursday's front pages

Eva Osborne

Here are the stories making headlines this Thursday.

Israel said it remained committed to the Gaza ceasefire framework yesterday despite killing more than 100 people in strikes across the enclave, The Irish Times reports.

The Irish Examiner leads with the murderers of 47-year-old Kieran Quilligan starting their life sentences on Wednesday as the victim’s parents described them as monsters who had shown no remorse and who would never be forgiven.

The Land Development Agency has lodged planning permission for the development of 147 new homes in the heart of Cork city centre in partnership with Cork City Council, according to The Echo.

More than one-and-a-half million households have to file a property tax valuation by midnight on Saturday.

More than 550,000 returns have been filed, with 27,000 filed on bank holiday Monday alone, the Irish Independent reports.

The Irish Daily Mirror leads with Dublin firefighter Terence Crosbie's previous tweets being revealed as he faces sentencing for raping a woman in the US.

The Irish Daily Star also leads with Crosbie's tweets, reporting that he can face up to 20 years in a US prison.

Female paramedics have been subjected to a litany of sexual harassment incidents and a culture of misogyny, the Irish Daily Mail reports.

The Herald leads with the pilot of a light aircraft that transported €8.4 million of cocaine into the midlands from France in 2022 being convicted by a jury for his role in the drug importation operation.

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