From Voice Of Europe, migrants now constitute about 15 percent of the population of the Greek island of Lesbos.
From Chronicle Live, this year's British storm season will start with Ali. (The story comes via Voice Of Europe. I can't resist saying "Down goes Frazier!" CORRECTION: That was Foreman, not Ali, who knocked Frazier down. Never mind.)
From ANSA, according to Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte, "fiscal peace is essential". (via Voice Of Europe)
From Deutsche Welle, migration and Brexit loom at the E.U. summit in Austria.
From the NL Times, a proposal by Geert Wilders and the PVV to ban Islamic expressions is quickly shot down.
From Dutch News, a proposal by Klaas Dijkstra and the VVD to toughen penalties for people in "problem areas" is also shot down.
From VRT NWS, Belgium's interior minister opposes a Turkish Islamic school being established in Genk.
From the Express, U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May gives E.U. Brexit negotiators a two-month ultimatum.
From the Independent, May announces a crackdown on migrant smugglers who advertise on Facebook.
From the Greek Reporter, Bush the Younger expresses his support for the Greece-FYROM agreement.
From CBC News, Canadian Conservatives call their government's firearm legislation a "back door gun registry". (Like the U.K. party of the same name, Canada's Conservatives are called "Tories".)
From Gatestone Institute, Turkish higher education is obsessively religious.
From National Review, "make sex crimes criminal again".
From FrontpageMag, President Trump orders numerous documents declassified.
From Townhall, did the Democrats execute a brilliant "kill move" on SCOTUS nominee Kavanaugh, or did it blow up in their faces?
From The Washington Free Beacon, Texas Republicans flip a State Senate seat long held by Democrats.
And from Breaking Burgh, in the aftermath of Florence, a large mass of hot air arrives in North Carolina. (Some would even say that it's "yuge".)
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