The following are the top stories in Malta's newspapers on Saturday.
Times of Malta leads with government employee Neville Gafà being filmed removing tributes to Daphne Caruana Galizia from the Great Siege Memorial hours after the eighth anniversary of her murder, in a move that angered various embassies that laid wreaths at the site.
The newspaper also gives prominence to a study reporting the experiences of doctors who crashed their vehicles due to fatigue after working long shifts of up to 32 hours.
The Malta Independent leads with airline pilots' union ALPA withdrawing directives in place for KM Malta Airlines pilots, following a unanimous vote to do so by its members.
It also features projections that Gozo's population is set to grow to 52,000 by 2042.
In-Nazzjon features two reports of speeches delivered by PN deputy leader Alex Perici Calascione and secretary general Charles Bonello at the opening of the party's general administrative council yesterday.
l-orizzont gives priority to the launch of a new physical activity strategy, the government's meeting with the Association of Catering Establishments (ACE), a man being acquitted of heroin possession and one mother's choice to not provide her seven and nine-year-old children with smartphones.