Tuesday, February 19, 2019

Tuesday Links

As Tuesday afternoon rolls around, here are some things going on:

From Voice Of Europe, a 20-year-old Nigerian "refugee" in Germany commits over 100 crimes before being detained for deportation.

From Deutsche Welle, Saudi women who had fled to Germany still live under threat from their families.

From Radio Poland, a Polish radio broadcaster raises money for children in Mariupol, Ukraine.

From Radio Praha, Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babiš calls Israel "our strategic partner in the Middle East".

From The Slovak Spectator, Slovakia moves to protect whistleblowers.

From Daily News Hungary, according to Prime Minister Orban, Hungary will open a trade representation in Jerusalem.

From Hungary Today, the European Commission responds to Hungary's "information campaign".

From About Hungary, the Hungarian government will promote the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s definition of anti-Semitism.

From Russia Today, Russia introduces the newest version of the Kalashnikov.

From Sputnik International, an American spy plane is reportedly surveying the coast of Crimea.

From Ekathimerini, Greece's government and its banks disagree on how to protect debtors.

From the Greek Reporter, the Australian Archaeological Institute celebrates ancient Greek music.

From Independent Balkan News Agency, Bosnia and Hercegovina has found several migrants linked to terrorism.

From Total Croatia News, is Starbucks coming to Croatia?  (If you read Croatian, read the story at Novac.)

From ANSA, an Italian Senate panel votes against putting Interior Minister Salvini on trial.

From the Malta Independent, Maltese customs officials seize more then 15 million cigarettes.

From Morocco World News, Morocco plans to acquire its first submarine.

From El País, Spain's "far-right" Vox party takes its "anti-immigration" message to the Madrid area.  (The party is considered "far-right" and "anti-immigrant", I would suspect, because it wants immigration to be limited to finite numbers and to be decided on by Spain instead of the E.U. the U.N., and opposes illegal immigration.)

From France24, French politicians from across the political spectrum will march together against anti-Semitism.

From RFI, about 80 graves in the Jewish cemetery in Quatzenheim, France have been vandalized.

From VRT NWS, about 30 Belgian veterans of the Waffen SS could lose their German war pensions.

From the NL Times, the Dutch Caribbean island of Aruba is struggling to accommodate asylum seekers from Venezuela.

From Dutch News, the Netherlands will not take in any ISIS terrorists.

From the Express, ISIS bride Shamima Begum is stripped of her British citizenship.

From BBC News, U.K. Prime Minister May will go to Brussels for more Brexit talks.

From the (U.K.) Independent, according to former E.U. Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso, the U.K. will probably delay Brexit.

From the (Irish) Independent, three Northern Irish people rescue nine dogs from Chinese meat trade or medical testing.

From CBC News, Alberta announces a deal with two railroads to transport crude oil.

From Global News, a judge dismisses charges against former SNC-Lavalin executive Stéphane Roy.

From CTV News, the "United We Roll" truckers rally in Ottawa.

From Turkish Minute, Turkish authorities order the detention of another 363 alleged Gülen followers.

From Rûdaw, the U.N. is concerned about the 200 families trapped in ISIS's last remaining enclave.

From Arutz Sheva, two American congresscritters visit Israel.

From The Times Of Israel, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu urges Europe to take a stand against anti-Semitism.

From The Jerusalem Post, Netanyahu and political rival Benny Gantz trade barbs.

From YNetNews, an incendiary device attached to a balloon causes fires in the Kissufim forest.

From the Egypt Independent, in the North Sinai region, Egyptian police send 16 terrorists to their virgins.

From Egypt Today, what Egyptian women would get from constitutional changes being considered in parliament.

From The Express Tribune, a commander of Iran's Revolutionary Guard believes that the person who carried out a suicide attack against them was Pakistani.

From Pakistan Today, Sikhs come to the rescue of students and traders in the Indian-controlled part of Kashmir.  (The article calls the area "Indian occupied Kashmir".)

From Winds of Jihad, an Islamist imprisoned in Australia calls Jews "the most evil creatures of Allah".

From Gatestone Institute, Facebook is still championing blasphemy laws.

From FrontpageMag, how Democrats created the border crisis.  (Neither I nor the article's author regards Republicans as innocent, for that matter.)

From National Review, our age is full of strange paradoxes.

From Townhall, "do leftists believe what they say?"

From The Washington Free Beacon, congresscritter Ilhan Omar (D-MN) has connections to a radical group.

From the Washington Examiner, Senator Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) realizes that you can't have free everything.

From The Federalist, President Trump is "on solid legal ground" with his border emergency.

From American Thinker, Trump gave a "magnificent" speech on Venezuela.

From LifeZette, five celebrities who owe Trump and his supporters an apology over the Smollette hoax.

From NBC News, the Trump administration launches a global effort to have homosexuality decriminalized.  (I'm pretty sure that his detractors will still call him a homophobe.)

From CNS News, it looks like we'll have another chance to "feel the Bern".

From The Conservative Woman, polar bears and penguins appear to be defying the predictions of the climate change crowd.

From Fox News, Ariana Grande has achieved something also done only by the Beatles.

From the New York Post, police in Pennsylvania find an alligator guarding a drug house, and give it a new name.

And from The Babylon Bee, Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) claims to have been assaulted by two guys wielding smallpox-infected blankets.

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