From the Hungary Journal, Hungarian Prime Minister Orban announces a family protection package. (via Voice Of Europe)
From Hungary Today, Orban also says that Hungarians have worked hard for their achievements.
From Daily News Hungary, Hungary and the U.S. will cooperate on family-related policies.
From Radio Praha, Czech Health Minister Adam Vojtěch says that doctors who graduate in the Czech Republic will have to stay there for a while.
From Radio Poland, Poland plans to purchase HIMARS rocket artillery systems from the U.S.
From Deutsche Welle, according to U.S. Ambassador Richard Grenell, Germany is "not spending enough" on defense.
From VRT NWS, someone in Belgium might be missing a kangaroo.
From France24, this weekend's "yellow vest" protests had a low turnout.
From the Sunday Express, a BBC host points out two "major" flaws in a Brexit proposal from the Labour Party.
From BBC News, there will be more parliamentary votes on Brexit.
From the Evening Standard, a science building at the University of St. Andrews catches fire.
From the Independent, according to Labour Party Deputy Leader Tom Watson, some MPs have changed their Brexit votes out of fear for their safety.
From the Irish Examiner, a group protesting outside the home of Ireland's health minister defends their reasons for being there.
From Global News, Saskatchewan and Ottawa take the Canadian federal government to court over its carbon dioxide tax. (The article calls it a "carbon tax", leaving out "dioxide", but as far as I know, they're not taxing diamonds or graphite.)
From SwissInfo, Swiss voters reject a law that would freeze new construction.
From Voice Of Europe, almost 80 percent of inmates in Swiss prisons are not Swiss.
From Morocco World News, Morocco's King Mohammed IV will receive a visit from Pope Francis.
From the Malta Independent, worshipers in Valetta, Malta celebrate the feast of St. Paul's shipwreck. (For some background, see Acts Of The Apostles, Chapter 28.)
From Total Croatia News, did a Croatian captain refuse to help drowning migrants? (If you read Croatian, read the story at 24Sata.)
From Ekathimerini, Greece will send North Macedonia diplomatic notification of its ratification the name treaty and the latter's accession to NATO.
From the Greek Reporter, a British actress says that the Parthenon's marble statues belong back in Greece.
From the Independent Balkan News Agency, some changes for 2019.
From Turkish Minute, Turkey calls upon China to close its "concentration camps" for the Uighur minority.
From Hürriyet Daily News, according to the head of Human Rights Watch, others should join Turkey in defending the Uighurs.
From Rûdaw, 27 Russian children are repatriated from Iraq.
From The Times Of Israel, Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas urges African support for his people while in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
From The Jerusalem Post, international observers who left Hebron, West Bank are replaced by Palestinian civilian monitors.
From YNetNews, Hamas goes back to rioting on the Gaza-Israel border.
From the Egypt Independent, Egypt starts constructing the Suez Canal International Museum.
From Radio Farda, Iranian Grand Ayatollah Assadollah Bayat Zanjani speaks out against child marriage.
From Khaama Press, Afghanistan's president renews his government's offer of an office to the Taliban.
From Gatestone Institute, the 40th anniversary of Iran's revolution.
From The Conservative Woman, the left's answer to the problems in Venezuela is to complain about Saudi Arabia instead.
From Townhall, the Pope seems to have gone Sergeant Schulz on Venezuela.
From the Washington Examiner, Senator Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) throws her hat into the presidential ring.
From The Federalist, why it's good that Virginia Governor Northam (D) survived the revelations about his racist past.
From American Thinker, the wall can be built, as we learned from 2006 to 2008.
From LifeZette, construction on one section of the wall will start very soon.
From Medical News Today, could insulin injections be replaced by a pill?
From The Daily Caller, the electric conversion component of the "green new deal" could be an impossible nightmare.
From CNS News, Speaker Pelosi (D-Cal) has no problem with the "green new deal".
And from the New York Post, thugs beat up a black man in the New York area of Hell's Kitchen, for a weird reason.
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