From Voice Of Europe, Muslims in France name a mosque in honor of the Muslims who died in the Battle of Tours (which, if my knowledge of history is correct, the Muslims lost).
From BBC News, Boris Johnson resigns as the U.K.'s foreign secretary.
From The Local ES, Spain deals with the depopulation of nearly 4,200 villages. (via Voice Of Europe)
From the Express, Germany shuns a letter from Interior Minister Horst Seehofer urging unrestricted cooperation with the U.K. post-Brexit.
From the NL Times, at least six Dutch women, currently in Kurdish camps, ask Dutch authorities to arrest them.
From France24, Bosnia refuses to be the E.U.'s border guard.
From The Times Of Israel, an Iranian commander claims that an Islamic army is in Syria, "awaiting orders" to destroy Israel. (via Sputnik International)
From the Jakarta Globe, dozens of mosques in Indonesia belonging to state-owned institutions have "strong radical inclinations".
From FrontpageMag, after a Muslim kills his wife and beheads their child, German Prime Minister Merkel permits the media to only report on the former.
From Gatestone Institute, the U.K. parliament seems to have little interest in grooming gangs.
From The Slovak Spectator, Slovak Prime Minister Peter Pellegrini discusses extending broad gauge railroad track across his country.
From National Review, Hillary Clinton probably won't run again in 2020, except if she does.
From Townhall, defensive gun use is far greater than gun homicides, but that doesn't impress the gun grabbers.
From ABC News, a airplane crew rescues a dog from hypoxia. (via the New York Post)
From the New York Post, Pamplona, Spain holds their annual trampling of the idiots.
From CBS News, eight boys have been rescued from the flooded cave in Thailand.
From The Roanoke Times, Virginia Tech dismisses a football player.
And from Breaking Burgh, President Trump cancels his trip to the U.K. after learning who the U.S. fought in the American Revolution.
No comments:
Post a Comment