From Voice Of Europe, Italian Interior Minister Salvini tells the migrant-laden ship Aquarius 2 "don't come here".
From Radio Poland, a Swiss exhibition shows how Polish diplomats helped Jews during World War II. (via Voice Of Europe)
From Radio Praha, Czech workers get up earlier than most Europeans, a legacy that goes back to an Austro-Hungarian emperor.
From The Slovak Spectator, Russia questions the quality of repair work done by Slovaks on Afghani helicopters.
From Russia Today, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov says that the Balkans shouldn't have to choose between the West and Russia.
From Sputnik International, Kosovo tells Israel, "recognize us, get another embassy in Jerusalem".
From Ekathimerini, 217 refugees have been transferred from Lesvos to the Greek mainland.
From the Greek Reporter, a documentary about the "lost" Jews of Kastoria, Greece will be aired.
From Total Croatia News, Croatia and Slovenia maintain good relations despite their border dispute.
From El PaĆs, Spain hopes to get a Brexit deal over Gibraltar during October.
From France24, French President Emmanuel Macron honors Algerians who fought for France in the Algerian war of independence. (I guess this would be analogous to Britain honoring the American loyalists, known as "Tories".)
From the NL Times, childcare organizations have stopped using electric cargo bikes after the fatal collision with a train in Oss.
From Dutch News, according to Prime Minister Mark Rutte, the Netherlands is more prepared for a hard Brexit than the U.K. is.
From Deutsche Welle, according to a poll in Germany, the "far-right" AfD is second only to Prime Minister Merkel's conservatives. (As I might have said previously, if you're opposed flooding your country with unlimited numbers of migrants, you're "far-right".)
From the Daily Mail, in Austria, a bank robber disguises himself with a hijab.
From the Express, U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May defends her country.
From the Metro, a student editor at Durham University is fired for stating an obvious fact. (via The Blaze)
From the Independent, the British party UKIP proposes Muslim-only prisons.
From the Malta Independent, today is the anniversary of Malta becoming independent.
From The New Arab, a geologist who fought against ISIS now tries to preserve antiquities in Mosul, Iraq.
From Gatestone Institute, the OIC's plan to kill free speech. (The last three links come via The Religion Of Peace.)
From National Review, Senator Diane Feinstein (D-Cal) should be censured.
From FrontpageMag, George Orwell's "newspeak" has become reality.
From The Washington Free Beacon, 75 women express their support for Brett Kavanaugh.
From Breitbart's Big Government, feminists say that proof beyond a reasonable doubt against Kavanaugh is not necessary. (They're technically correct, since the Senate is not a court of law. What's the standard of proof? There's actually 100 such standards, each in the mind of the respective Senator.)
From Philly(dot)com, four reasons against declaring peace in Korea.
From LifeNews, Belgium conceals information about three euthanized children.
From the New York Post, the woman who killed three people at a Rite Aid distribution center in Maryland had a history of mental illness.
And from the Press-Republican, an advocate group for short people objects to Governor Andrew Cuomo (D-NY) using the term "Mimi Me". (via the New York Post)
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