From National Review, wait about a week, says Attorney General Barr.
From Townhall, spying did occur, says Barr.
From The Washington Free Beacon, the Pence-Buttigieg "feud" really isn't.
From the Washington Examiner, Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass) is in the one percent.
From The Federalist, Vice President Pence does not hate gay people.
From American Thinker, Candace Owens is the anti-AOC.
From FrontpageMag, Owens lets the Democrat congresscritters have it.
From CNS News, former FBI general counsel James Baker was "quite alarmed" about the Strzok-Page texts.
From The Conservative Woman, the liberal West abandons persecuted Christians.
From the Express, will the U.K. ever leave the E.U.?
From the Evening Standard, former Conservative Party leader Iain Duncan Smith tells Prime Minister Theresa May to get while the getting's good.
From the (U.K.) Independent, a British man wanted to bomb the country's largest mosque in revenge for the Manchester attack.
From the (Irish) Independent, Ireland's Taoiseach backs May as Brexit negotiations reopen.
From the Irish Examiner, a gasoline station in Country Derry, Ireland protects its ATM with concrete.
From the NL Times, more companies fleeing Brexit go to the Netherlands.
From Dutch News, on the other hand, the Dutch state railway will operate even more trains in England.
From Deutsche Welle, German Chancellor Angela Merkel supports a longer extension for Brexit.
From Radio Poland, Poland marks the 9th anniversary of the airplane crash which took the life of President Kaczyński, his wife, and 94 others.
From Radio Praha, Václav Klaus Jr. plans to launch a new political party after the European elections.
From Daily News Hungary, police evacuate residents of Buda so they can dispose of bombs left over from World War II. (The city of Budapest is the union of two cities named Buda and Pest. Buda was a Roman settlement on hills overlooking the Danube, which was the empire's border. On the other side of the river, Pest was built more recently and is located on relatively flat land.)
From Hungary Today, from 2016 to 2018, 56,000 babies registered as Hungarian were born outside Hungary.
From About Hungary, Hungary contributes funds to rebuild two churches in Mexico.
From Russia Today, a Russian scientist proposes transporting natural gas with submarines.
From The Moscow Times, the U.S. warns its citizens in Russia about risks of being kidnapped.
From CBC News, Quebec's proposed ban on religious symbols is welcomed by some who immigrated from Muslim countries.
From Global News, the Canadian federal government prepares to make interprovincial alcohol sales easier, but provincial laws might still create a barrier.
From Mexico News Daily, for the 10th day, a road between Oaxaca and Veracruz remains under blockade. (I'd say that gringos such as Black Lies Matter have nothing on these guys. I have 7 MND pages left this month.)
From El País, Spanish unions plan strikes for Easter weekend.
From The Portugal News, a new wave of immigrants from Brazil arrives in Portugal.
From Morocco World News, Spain and Morocco want stronger cooperation on defense and migration.
From the Malta Independent, the crew of a highjacked ship locked themselves on the bridge, according to court testimony.
From Total Croatia News, the Adriatic Sea Defence & Aerospace Conference starts in Split, Croatia.
From Independent Balkan News Agency, migrants continue to pass through Bosnia and Hercegovina.
From Ekathimerini, Turkey claims to have stopped migrants from crossing the Evros river into Greece.
From the Greek Reporter, two U.S. senators introduce legislation to strengthen American ties to Greece and Cyprus.
From Hürriyet Daily News, according to Turkish President Erdoğan, the Russian S-400 missile defense systems are on their way.
From Turkish Minute, wives of jailed former police chiefs are themselves jailed for using the smartphone app ByLock.
From Arutz Sheva, Binyamin Netanyahu wins his fifth term as Israel's prime minister, and Islamophobia and anti-Semitism are very different.
From The Times Of Israel, the Blue and White party concedes, but promises to make life difficult for Likud.
From The Jerusalem Post, the spacecraft Beresheet is "poised" to land on the moon.
From YNetNews, Netanyahu's victory could be short-lived.
From Egypt Today, Egypt's efforts to empower women draws praise from Ivanka Trump.
From Radio Farda, Iran's president threatens the U.S. with more centrifuges.
From Dawn, foreign journalists are given access to a madrassa near the site of an Indian air strike.
From The Express Tribune, Pakistan sends aid to flood-stricken Iran.
From Pakistan Today, according to Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan, Asia Bibi will be leaving the country "very soon".
From Khaama Press, security forces thwart an explosion in Kabul and defuse the IED.
From the Daily Post, in a sharia court, a woman accuses her husband of being unable to have children.
From Gatestone Institute, the Nation of Islam and social justice.
From The Daily Caller, why the gender pay gap can be called a "myth".
From NewsBusters, the media have no problem with the socialist who denounced millionaires being one himself.
From Fox News, Democrats aren't happy that Attorney General Barr claims that federal authorities spied on the Trump campaign.
From WPVI-TV, an extinct human species is identified from remains found in a cave in the Philippines.
And from Gizmodo, scientists reveal the first-ever image of a black hole.
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