What the papers say: Saturday's front pages

Tomas Doherty
A wide range of stories feature across Saturday's newspaper front pages, including a vigil for the victims of the Fermanagh shooting.
The Irish Times reports that European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen and United States President Donald Trump will meet in Scotland on Sunday, in an effort to get a deal on tariffs over the line.
TV licence fee revenue has decreased by over €58 million in the last two years, according to the Irish Examiner.
Survivors and relatives of victims of the Creeslough explosion have filed a number of lawsuits, the Irish Independent reveals.
The Irish Daily Mail reports that the health service lost more than €4 million last year by failing to submit bills to insurers on time.
The Irish Daily Mirror leads with a vigil held in Maguiresbridge for the mother and two children killed in the Fermanagh shooting incident.
Senior Kinahan cartel boss Thomas 'Bomber' Kavanagh has been order to pay €1.2 million or spend more time behind bars, according to the Irish Daily Star.
The Herald reports that a woman who was tortured and falsely imprisoned in a Dublin flat over a false accusation about missing drugs told a court she will never forgive the “sick human beings” for what they did to her.
A childminder who looked after the two teenagers killed in the Fermanagh shooting tells the Belfast Telegraph that the local commuity is broken.
The Irish News reports that the taxpayer paid for the North's deputy first minister and her husband to attend Wimbledon and sit in the royal box.
Planning permission has been refused for apartments on the site of the Bessborough mother and baby home, The Echo reports.