From the Independent, according to a U.N. report, both sides in the Yemen civil war may have committed war crimes.
From France24, the number of visitors to Paris reaches a record high.
From Deutsche Welle, a timeline of recent violence in Chemnitz, Germany.
From the National Post, the RCMP arrests a 16-year-old youth for allegedly shooting a German tourist.
From Global News, the new NAFTA deal between the U.S. and Mexico may affect Canadian duty-free limits.
From Ekathimerini, according to a local newspaper, Turkey is planning to build a naval base in northern Cyprus.
From the Greek Reporter, Greek Primier Alexis Tsipras reshuffles his cabinet.
From ANSA, Italian Interior Minister Salvini meets with Hungarian Premier Orban to discuss migrants.
From Radio Poland, in September, President Trump will welcome Polish President Duda to the White House. (This gives me an idea. Since Mrs. Trump speaks Slovenian and Serbo-Croatian, which are related to Polish, is there anything that she could teach the Donald which Mr. Duda would recognize?)
From Radio Praha, Czech trade unions want more time off.
From The Slovak Spectator, the Most-Híd party wants more rights for foreigners in Slovakia. (The Slovak word most and the Hungarian word híd both mean "bridge".)
From Russia Today, Russia has built up its presence in the Mediterranean near Syria.
From Sputnik International, the United States expands its Air Force base in Romania.
From the NL Times, a man in Naaldwijk, the Netherlands learns the hard way that when cops tells you to drop the knife, you should drop the knife.
From Dutch News, Schiphol Airport goes to court asking to have a strike by security staff declared illegal. (If you read Dutch, read the story at AD.)
From El País, French police send hundreds of migrants back into Spain.
From The Sun, an Afghan man is suspected of murdering a Syrian mother and daughter in England. (via FrontpageMag)
From the South China Morning Post, a sharia court in Malaysia delays the caning punishment of two lesbians for "technical reasons".
From The Washington Times, schoolchildren in Ohio pick who gets to go on a trip and who doesn't.
From National Review, how fifty years ago, the old Democratic Party died.
From FrontpageMag, "innocent lives matter".
From The Washington Free Beacon, after bashing tech companies, George Soros buys multi-million dollars worth of their stocks.
From LifeNews, let's approve a SCOTUS justice who knows that "abortion" does not appear in the Constitution.
From CBS News, the number of people who died in Puerto Rico from Hurricane Maria is far greater than previously thought. (via The Daily Caller)
From The Verge, Ford asks the government to partially exempt law enforcement vehicles from the minimum noise requirements for electric vehicles.
From The Hill, a proposal to rename an office building after Senator John McCain receives a backlash from his own party.
From the New York Post, a former Texas policeman has been found guilty of murder for shooting an unarmed black teenager.
From Newsweek, an Oklahoma policeman acquitted in the death of an unarmed black man holds a class on "surviving officer-involved shootings".
From Decider, bees swarm on a hot dog cart.
And from Breaking Burgh, Google denies Trump's allegations of bias and introduces a new logo.
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