Since it's March fourth, I must march forth with some things going on:
From Voice Of Europe, right-wing French politician Marine Le Pen will be prosecuted for Tweets against ISIS.
From France24, a nude drawing resembling the Mona Lisa is thought to be the work of Leonardo da Vinci himself.
From the Express, Prince Charles of the U.K. might have had his own Russian collusion.
From BBC News, police in Tanzania arrest 65 "witchdoctors" over the deaths of 10 children.
From the Evening Standard, according to Prime Minister May, cuts in police manpower have nothing to do with the increase in knife crime. (Canadian P.M. Justin Trudeau would object to the term "manpower" and insist on "peoplepower" or "personpower".)
From the (U.K.) Independent, a man has been charged for the egg attack on U.K. Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn.
From the (Irish) Independent, Irish gardai arrest two men and seize ATM skimming equipment. (The term "gardai" means "policemen". The singular, from what I can gather, is "garda".)
From the Irish Examiner, the Irish government is "happy" to offer clarification about its concerns over the border backstop.
From CTV News, China charges two detained Canadians with stealing state secrets.
From Mexico News Daily, Mexicans clean up 1,000 tires and eight vehicles from the ocean floor near Cabo San Lucas.
From El País, Spain and the U.K. make a deal to curb tax evasion in Gibraltar.
From Morocco World News, about 85,000 people reportedly live in slavery in Morocco.
From ANSA, Pope Francis will open the archives of Pope Pius XII in 2020.
From Ekathimerini, eleven residents of Pella, Greece sue the local police over illegal detentions.
From Independent Balkan News Agency, the U.S. embassy in Tirane, Albania alerts Americans about planned protests.
From Novinite, a Bulgarian citizen is arrested in Greece for allegedly trafficking babies.
From Russia Today, orcas and belugas in a Russian "whale jail" await their fate.
From Sputnik International, President Putin suspends Russia's participation in the INF.
From Daily News Hungary, could a plan by the Hungarian central bank stop the country's emigration crisis?
From Hungary Today, the Hungarian government announces its plans for the Hungarian diaspora.
From About Hungary, looking at the facts, it's hard to believe that the E.U. is doing anything to stop illegal immigration.
From The Slovak Spectator, a Slovak firm will help draw up plans for Amazon's new headquarters in Washington, D.C.
From Radio Poland, Gdańsk, Poland chooses its newest mayor, who takes over for her murdered predecessor.
From Deutsche Welle, despite tensions between the U.S. and Germany, their peoples are united by common threats.
From the NL Times, a banner insulting Muhammad is placed near a ,mosque in The Hague.
From Dutch News, the Netherlands will not take in the British ISIS bride or her Dutch husband.
From VRT NWS, non-Belgian E.U. citizens living in Belgium receive their voter registration reminders at the last minute.
From Hürriyet Daily News, more women are assuming important roles in Turkey's foreign ministry.
From Turkish Minute, half a million people in Turkey have been investigated over suspected Gülen links.
From Rûdaw, the Syrian refugee camp of Al-Hol has been overwhelmed.
From Arutz Sheva, Israeli authorities catch four Arabs carrying pipe bombs.
From The Times Of Israel, the U.S. deploys an advanced THAAD missile defense system in Israel.
From The Jerusalem Post, Israel gets its first female Muslim ambucycle rider.
From YNetNews, an IDF officer is seriously hurt when he is rammed by a car.
From Radio Farda, the Iranian parliament votes for term limits.
From Dawn, Pakistan's airspace has been fully reopened.
From The Express Tribune, India allegedly continues to violate the cease-fire along the Line of Control.
From Pakistan Today, what now for Pakistan and India?
From Khaama Press, policemen in Afghanistan's province of Herat 1 - terrorist who tried to assassinate them 0.
From The Buffalo News, sharia-compliant lending comes to Buffalo, New York for a student housing complex.
From Ahval, a proposed law could push Turkish imams out of Germany.
From Women In The World, ISIS wives reportedly strictly enforced the caliphate's rules.
From the Bangkok Post, six couples in Indonesia's Aceh province were reportedly whipped in public as punishment for unmarried sex.
From Gatestone Institute, some Palestinians refuse to have peace with "infidels".
From The Algemeiner, the lull in terrorism in the West hides a deepening jihadist threat.
From FrontpageMag, an American ISIS collaborator gets 15 years in prison.
From National Review, the death of Christian sexual morality has been greatly exaggerated.
From Townhall, six reasons why the left hates the Electoral College, but should love it.
From The Washington Free Beacon, the Democrats get one more 2020 presidential candidate.
From the Washington Examiner, Democrat congresscritters start a new investigation.
From The Federalist, "how the Obama presidency normalized abortion extremism".
From American Thinker, the most important scientific breakthrough that you might not know about.
From CNS News, the full power of American women should be "unleashed", says America's most powerful woman.
From LifeNews, on abortion, New Mexico appears ready to join New York and Virginia.
From The Daily Caller, Senator Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) wants to form a climate change panel.
From Fox News, scientists explain the tracks on the floor of Belize's Great Blue Hole.
And from TMZ, actor Luke Perry has died of a stroke at age 52.
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