What the papers say: Tuesday's front pages

A three-vehicle collision between a lorry, a bus and a car in Co Meath is among the stories featured on Tuesday's front pages.
What the papers say: Tuesday's front pages

Ellen O'Donoghue

A three-vehicle collision between a lorry, a bus and a car that left two dead in Co Meath is among the stories featured on Tuesday's front pages.

The Irish Times lead with the Kremlin rejecting European counterproposals to a controversial US peace plan for Ukraine that heavily favoured Russia, two drivers dying in a three-vehicle collision in Co Meath, and a new plan to charge asylum seekers for housing.

The Irish Examiner lead with extra gardaí patrolling Cork city's streets, a crash that left two dead and two others seriously injured in Co Meath, and disability payment applications being rejected at a “savage scale”.

The Echo lead with a high-visibility policing plan coming into effect in Cork city, and a man being jailed for six years for rape.

The Irish Independent lead with the Government getting ready to introduce a law that would allow people to cancel their broadband, mobile or TV contracts if prices increase.

The Irish Daily Star and The Herald lead with a man allegedly attacking a woman in Co Kildare before his body was found in a reservoir.

The Belfast Telegraph lead with a jailed cannabis farmer walking the streets less than a year into his three-year jail term.

The Irish Daily Mail lead with concerns over a spike in the number of learner drivers.

The Irish Daily Mirror lead with the crash between a lorry, a bus and a car in Co Meath on Monday morning that killed two.

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