From Voice Of Europe, the safest countries in Europe have something in common.
From the Express, U.K. MPs reveal a plan to push through an "ultra soft" Brexit.
From BBC News, after receiving hundreds of letters and emails, a school decides not to ban Christmas. (via the Evening Standard)
From the Evening Standard, for the second time in his 102-year life, a man is visited at his school by a reigning British Monarch.
From the (U.K.) Independent, the U.K. government finally publishes the legal advice it had received from their attorney general.
From the (Irish) Independent, Irish authorities seize €530,000 in laundered drug money.
From the Irish Examiner, doctors discussing new legislation on abortion have been moved to an undisclosed location.
From CBC News, Environment Canada hasn't been very environment-friendly with their weather balloons.
From Global News, Maine lobster fishermen use Canada to avoid Chinese tariffs.
From CTV News, Quebec raises the legal age for consuming cannabis.
From The Portugal News, the main European concerns of the Portuguese are Brexit and the Euro.
From France24, "yellow vest" protesters are not impressed by President Macron's delaying his fuel tax increase.
From RFI, French farmers plan to go on strike.
From SwissInfo, Switzerland elects their newest two Federal Councillors.
From VRT NWS, a select committee in the Belgian federal parliament approves a resolution on the U.N. migration pact.
From Dutch News, a majority in the lower house of the Dutch parliament vote to have the country sign the U.N. migration pact.
From the NL Times, E.U. action against a mafia clan includes dozens of raids in the Netherlands.
From Deutsche Welle, a German human rights group says that migrant workers are being exploited.
From Radio Poland, according to Polish Foreign Minister Jacek Czaputowicz, Russia is fueling regional instability.
From Radio Praha, St. Nicholas and two companions visit Czech children.
From The Slovak Spectator, no Slovaks will be riding on the Marrakesh express.
From Daily News Hungary, Hungary will boost its roles in Afghanistan and Kosovo.
From About Hungary, the editors at The New York Times are "so woke about Hungary".
From Sputnik International, anonymous bomb threat phone calls made to Russian railroad stations were all from outside Russia.
From Novinite, Bulgaria decides against joining the U.N. immigration pact.
From Independent Balkan News Agency, former FYROM Prime Minister Gruevski had written a letter to E.U. officials before fleeing to Hungary.
From the Greek Reporter, Greece is the "world champion in tax increases".
From Total Croatia News, a right-wing Croatian MP will protest the U.N. migration pact in Marrakesh.
From the Malta Independent, how many Maltese men does it take to change a light bulb?
From ANSA, six Roma in Foggia, Italy are detained by police for allegedly enslaving three Romanian girls. (People known as "Gypsies" are also called "Roma" and trace their ancestry to India. Like their alleged victims, the detained Roma are from Romania.)
From Hürriyet Daily News, a Turkish prosecutor seeks the arrest of two aides of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman over the murder of Jamal Khashoggi.
From Turkish Minute, in two years, the number of rape convictions in Turkey increases by a factor of 23.
From Arutz Sheva, the IDF releases photos showing a Hezbollah terror tunnel.
From The Times Of Israel, Israel claims to have shared details about the Hezbollah tunnels with Lebanon.
From The Jerusalem Post, the U.N. Security Council will meet on the Hezbollah tunnels.
From Rûdaw, rain washes away a Yezidi mass grave.
From Khaama Press, the appointment of a young female Afghan deputy interior minister receives a mixed reaction.
From The Star, the death sentence for a raped woman is called the "world's worst case for women's rights".
From The Tundra Tabloids, in Finland, two foreign men try to cause bus accidents.
From the National Council of Resistance of Iran, Iran is undergoing a "tsunami of poverty".
From National Review, George W. Bush eulogizes his father.
From The Washington Free Beacon, Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL) grills an ambassador nominee about the murder of the Rohingya.
From the Washington Examiner, another migrant caravan is headed for Arizona.
From CNS News, the climate agenda burns in Paris.
From WNMU-FM, a Michigan House committee approves a bill that would ban abortions by telemedicine. (via LifeNews)
From The Daily Caller, in Venezuela, cremations are delayed by fuel shortages.
From Breitbart, congresscritter-to-be Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez says that she will pay her interns $15 per hour.
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