On the first day of September, here are some more things going on:
From Morocco World News, seven tips for climbing the highest mountain in Morocco.
From Egypt Today, Kuwait's Emir hails Egypt's support for Arab security.
From Arutz Sheva, how an IDF maneuver tricked Hezbolloah.
From The Times Of Israel, Hezbollah fires anti-tank missiles at an IDF base and a jeep, but hurt no one.
From The Jerusalem Post, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu promises to apply sovereignty to all West Bank settlements.
From YNetNews, Netanyahu is under fire for urging a boycott of an Israeli TV channel.
From In-Cyprus, residents of Inea, Cyprus stage a protest calling for development and the protection of turtles.
From StepFeed, most of the Arab world's most expensive buildings are in the UAE. (If you've bought gasoline during the past ten years, you've probably helped pay for them. Obviously, I must plead guilty along with everyone else.)
From Rûdaw, Iraq starts exporting oil from Kirkuk to Jordan.
From Radio Farda, Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif denies evading a meeting with U.S. President Trump.
From Dawn, according to Pakistani Foreign Minister Mahmood Qureshi, the lives and businesses of the residents of Indian-controlled Kashmir are not safe.
From The Express Tribune, Pakistan grants consular access to Kulbhushan Jadhav, on death row for spying.
From Pakistan Today, the leader of the group Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-Fazl promises a march on Islamabad, Pakistan in October.
From Khaama Press, a roadside bomb allegedly planted by the Taliban kills 8 civilians.
From The Hans India, when robots enter classrooms.
From the Hindustan Times, India and Pakistan have a heated exchange over Kashmir at a speakers' summit in the Maldives.
From ANI, the Indian Space Research Organization successfully conducts the fifth and final lunar orbit maneuver of the spacecraft Chandrayaan-2.
From India Today, according to BJP party leader Ram Madhav, all Indians have a responsibility to connect with the people of Kashmir.
From the Daily Mirror, thousands of Australians protest the deportation of a Sri Lankan family.
From the Colombo Page, a boat carrying illegal migrants from Sri Lanka is intercepted off the Australian Coast. (Will some Australians also protest their eventual deportation?)
From NDTV, a man in Delhi, India allegedly kills a sex worker and chops her body into five pieces.
From The Jakarta Post, former U.S. President (and former Indonesian resident) Barack Obama shares his summer reading list and playlist.
From The Straits Times, Hong Kong protesters attack metro stations and disrupt train stations.
From the Borneo Post, three people are held over a bomb hoax at Penang International Airport.
From Free Malaysia Today, Malaysia and Cambodia are expected to sign a treaty against double taxation.
From The Mainichi, the whaling town of Taiji, Japan begins its annual dolphin hunt.
And from Gatestone Institute, "European dreams vs. mass migration".
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