Sunday, August 18, 2019

Sunday Stuff - Part 2

On a very warm and sunny Sunday, here are some more things going on:

From Morocco World News, Morocco needs blood donations.

From the Egypt Independent, Egyptian police 3 - drug dealers 0.

From Egypt Today, a new nuclear power plant at Dabaa, Egypt will be modeled on one near St. Petersburg, Russia.

From Arutz Sheva, an Israeli town is evacuated after Hezbollah terrorists set a fire near the border.

From The Times Of Israel, Jordan reprimands Israel's ambassador for Temple Mount "violations".

From The Jerusalem Post, Pride parades or similar events seem rather unlikely for the West Bank.

From YNetNews, political leaders slam Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu after a tense weekend at the Gaza border.

From Rûdaw, images show that Iran appears to be preparing to launch a satellite.

From Hürriyet Daily News, Turkey condemns a suicide bombing at a wedding in Afghanistan.

From StepFeed, researchers may have recreated a perfume used by Cleopatra.

From Radio Farda, the battle to succeed the current Iranian leadership takes its toll.

From Dawn, two elderly men are killed and a boy wounded allegedly by Indian troops attacking across the Line of Control in Kashmir.

From The Express Tribune, at least five people are killed and 17 injured when an IED explodes near a bus in Pakistan's Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province.

From Pakistan Today, Pakistani troops kill two Indian soldiers in retaliation for the above-mentioned deaths of two elderly men.

From Khaama Press, the U.N. responds to the wedding hall attack in Kabul, Afghanistan.

From The Hans India, parts of an Indian Air Force plane are found 51 years after it crashed.

From the Hindustan Times, some restrictions are reimposed in Jammu and Kashmir due to clashes.

From ANI, an earthquake strikes along the India-Myanmar border.

From India Today, according to India's home minister, the bill against triple talaq corrects a historic wrong.

From the Daily Mirror, Sri Lanka's tourism minister rules out Indian connections to the Easter Sunday bombings.

From the Colombo Page, Sri Lankan police arrest 12 people for allegedly illegally migrating by sea.

From GDN, a Kuwaiti scholar issues a fatwa against tattoos.

From Yahoo News, Uighurs are detained and later questioned by Chinese officials - in Egypt.

From WTVA, an American mother is ruled to be too Western to keep her child by a Saudi court.

From The Jakarta Post, thousands of residents of Bogor, West Java, Indonesia declare their independence from plastic.

From The Straits Times, for the first time in a while, the protests in Hong Kong are peaceful.

From the Borneo Post, according to Malaysian Prime Minister Tun Mahathir Mohamad, preacher Zakir Naik may speak about Islam, but not on racial politics.

From Free Malaysia Today, the prime minister takes a drive in a Proton Saga.

From The Mainichi, Japan will help African countries improve their waste management.

And from Gatestone Institute, "the extinction of Christians in the Middle East".

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