From Russia Today, a gunman kills 19 people at a college in Kerch, Crimea.
From Sputnik International, Russia wants the White Helmets removed form Syria.
From Radio Poland, Poland's state-run gas company signs a 20-year deal to import American liquefied natural gas.
From The Slovak Spectator, some selected Slovak soldiers will participate in NATO's largest military exercise.
From Deutsche Welle, German prosecutors suggest that the man who took a hostage in Cologne may have had Islamist motives.
From Handelsblatt Global, officials in Cologne are hesitant to call the hostage-taking an act of terrorism. (via Voice Of Europe)
From the NL Times, Dutch Foreign Minister Stef Blok thinks that more time is needed for Brexit negotiations.
From VRT NWS, Spain withdraws diplomatic status from the Flemish government's representative in Madrid. (This diplomat does not represent Belgium's national government, but the government of the commune of Flanders, one of three which constitute Belgium, if I correctly understand the arrangement.)
From The Guardian, Germany and France start to make contingency plans to respond to a no-deal Brexit.
From the Independent, France warns that U.K. citizens might need visas to enter if there is a no-deal Brexit.
From the Express, the E.U. promises to vote down any deal that allows a hard border between Ireland and the U.K.
From the Evening Standard, according to the president of the European Parliament, U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May has said nothing new during her latest visit.
From El País, Brexit negotiations over Gibraltar are complicated by tobacco.
From ANSA, after his claim for asylum is rejected, a man from Gambia kills himself near Taranto, Italy.
From The Local IT, less than half of surveyed Italians would stay in the E.U. (via Voice Of Europe)
From Voice Of Europe, Italian Interior Minister Matteo Salvini says that Italy will not be puppets for Brussels.
From Daily News Hungary, according to Hungary's cabinet, border protection is a duty of E.U. member states.
From Ekathimerini, Medecins Sans Frontieres responds to denials that rapes have occurred in the Moria migrant camp.
From the Greek Reporter, a palaestra has been discovered in Eretria, on the Greek island of Evia.
From Hürriyet Daily News, Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi was reportedly tortured and then decapitated.
From the Daily Mail, Khashoggi may have recorded what happened to him.
From The Times Of Israel, an Israeli general warns that "we can hit Gaza harder".
From AhlulBayt News Agency, the Iranian and Pakistani foreign ministers talk about border guards.
From Business Insider, China claims that its reeducation camps for Muslims are "free vocational training" centers.
From The Times Of India, India's National Investigation Agency probes whether a mosque in Haryana was to be a terror school. (via Defence Aviation Post)
From Gatestone Institute, Turkey has been enabling illegal migration into Europe.
From FrontpageMag, one feminist reveals who the real patriarchy is.
From The Washington Free Beacon, congressional candidate Scott Wallace (D-PA) puts out an ad featuring a convicted gun law violator.
From the Washington Examiner, the New York Times, while opposing President Trump's border wall, erects a security barrier. (If you click on this, you might want to turn your sound down because the page includes an audible ad that keeps going, and going, and going.)
From Philly(dot)com, "does it matter that Trump ridicules women?"
From LifeZette, in the upcoming congressional elections, Democrat donors outspend Republican donors more than 2-to-1.
From Bloomberg, according to "sources", Special Counsel Robert Mueller is ready to deliver his findings. (via the New York Post)
And from The Babylon Bee, how to distinguish Nazis from Antifa.
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