Newspaper headlines: Shooting victim 'died in mother's arms'

Image caption "How many more innocents must die?" is the headline on the front of the Express as it claims to know the identities of the two teenagers who died in separate London shootings on Monday night.
Image caption The Sun reports that 17-year-old Tanesha Melbourne died in her mother's arms.
Image caption An image of Tanesha is featured on the Guardian's front page. The paper says she is thought to be the 47th suspected murder victim in London this year.
Image caption The Metro also leads on the attacks, which were just hours apart. It claims Tanesha was a victim of a "postcode gang war".
Image caption Home Secretary Amber Rudd will announce new measures to crack down on gangs using social media to incite violence in the wake of the shootings, according to the Telegraph. The paper says photo sharing apps will be encouraged to immediately remove any content that promotes criminality or glamorises violence.
Image caption Meanwhile, the Mail focuses on Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn's attendance at a Passover event organised by the left-wing Jewish group, Jewdas. It says Mr Corbyn has been accused of a "gratuitous insult" to the mainstream Jewish community.
Image caption The revelation that scientists at Britain's top defence research lab, Porton Down, could not confirm the source of the nerve agent used to poison Sergei Skripal and his daughter is carried by the Times. It says an ally of German Chancellor Angela Merkel has questioned the UK's "global push" to isolate Russia, given the doubts over the chemical's origins.
Image caption The Mirror leads on the Duke of Edinburgh's planned hip operation claiming he has been "suffering weeks of agony".
Image caption Disney's offer to buy Sky News is the Financial Times's lead. The paper reports the bid could ease political and regulatory fears over media mogul Rupert Murdoch's influence on the industry in Britain. It comes after the Competition and Markets Authority suggested it would not recommend a deal between 21st Century Fox and Sky due to concerns surrounding editorial independence.
Image caption The Daily Star reports on Coronation Street's "bonkers" Easter storyline, in which character Pat Phelan came back from the dead.

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