What the papers say: Thursday's front pages
Here are the stories making headlines this Thursday.
The punishing heatwave that has swept across Europe, during which temperatures have climbed to unprecedented highs, is set to continue on Thursday, The Irish Times reports.
Ireland is bracing for the hottest day of 2026, possibly smashing a 150-year record.

The Irish Examiner leads with an Oireachtas committee saying Ireland needs to take its head “out of the sand” about the drugs crisis and decriminalise the personal possession of drugs.
With cross-party support, the Oireachtas drugs committee called for the offence of possession — for all drugs — to be removed from the statute book.

More than 500 Ukrainian residents living in the former Trabolgan holiday village have been told they will soon have to leave the East Cork facility they have been calling home, according to The Echo.
The residents of Trabolgan, now one of the largest accommodation locations for Ukrainians in the State, include 167 children, 74 pensioners, and 10 disabled people.

Food prices are likely to continue rising in the coming months due to the delayed effects of the Iran war, ESRI has warned.
While there has been an inflation shock from the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, it was mostly limited to oil and gas, the Irish Independent reports.
ESRI predicts the cost of food is likely to increase towards winter. “The impact of the war in the Middle East on food prices in Ireland is yet to be felt,” says its summer economic commentary.

Nikita Hand has thanked singer Pink after she criticised Conor McGregor's appearance on Jimmy Fallon's Tonight Show in the US, according to the Irish Daily Mirror.
McGregor, who was found by a civil jury to be liable for the rape of Hand, was on the talk show last week.

The Irish Daily Star leads with doctors warning the public to stay out of the sun during the heatwave, and not even think about getting a tan.

A recommendation by TDs and senators to decriminalise all drugs has sparked outrage and been branded by doctors as ‘very dangerous’ as it will lead to ‘more broken lives’, the Irish Daily Mail reports.
Members of the cross-party Joint Committee on Drugs Use have called for the possession of drugs for personal use – including cocaine and heroin – to be allowed.

Riad Bouchaker “went for the smallest children he could find” when he is alleged to have attempted to murder two five-year-olds and a six-year-old in Dublin, according to The Herald.
Det Gda Gary Moran suggested that Bouchaker demonstrated “restraint and patience” as he waited in the Parnell Square area for 37 minutes.
He also searched for a specific school on his mobile phone and asked a number of people for directions and inquired as to what time classes would finish.


