What the papers say: Saturday's front pages
Calls for a social media ban for under-16s, and possible fines for TikTok, make the front pages of Saturday's papers.
The Irish Times leads with a poll which shows three-quarters of voters favour banning under-16s from accessing social media.

The Irish Examiner leads with the European Commission telling TikTok its “addictive” features breach the law and risk multi-million-euro fines.

The Irish Independent reports that over 11,000 applications for retention permission have been submitted in the last two years, following the construction of thousands of extensions, garages, log cabins, apartments, and gyms without planning permission.

The Irish Daily Mail leads with five Irish people on a U.S "worst of worst" list of criminals in an attempt to justify violent immigration crackdown measures in Minnesota.

The Irish Daily Mirror leads with tributes paid to a man who was killed by a bus in Dublin.

The Irish Daily Star leads with warnings from experts that rivers are at max capacity as rain eases.

The Belfast Telegraph reveals Paul Tweed threatened newspapers for calling Jeffrey Epstein a paedophile — and did so after he was a convicted sex offender.r



