As a warm sunny Tuesday hangs around, here are some more things going on:
From Morocco World News, Morocco has the highest female suicide rate in northern Africa.
From Hürriyet Daily News, the U.S. sends two high-ranking military officials to Turkey to discuss the safe zone in Syria.
From Turkish Minute, Turkish prosecutors order 152 more detentions over alleged Gülen links.
From In-Cyprus, for the first time ever, a Saudi Arabian foreign minister will pay an official visit to Cyprus.
From Rûdaw, 31 people are killed and over 100 others wounded in a stampede during a Shiite celebration of Ashura in the Iraqi province of Karbala.
From Arutz Sheva, a red alert siren goes off during a speech by Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu.
From The Times Of Israel, Netanyahu promises to annex the Jordan Valley if re-elected.
From The Jerusalem Post, the Palestinian Authority warns Israel against annexing the Jordan Valley.
From Egypt Today, Egypt arrests 16 members of the Muslim Brotherhood who had been communicating with fugitives in Turkey.
From StepFeed, Saudi Arabia will be the first Arab and Asian country to host the Dakar rally in 2020.
From Radio Farda, Iran changes the names of its oil tankers to confuse sanctions monitors.
From IranWire, FIFA responds to the death of the "Blue Girl" who set herself on fire after being denied admission to a soccer game.
From Dawn, amid tight security, Ashura is observed in Pakistan.
From The Express Tribune, Pakistan demands that the U.N. investigate India's actions in Kashmir.
From Khaama Press, the good guys in Afghanistan have a busy day.
From The Hans India, India's first cloud-based irrigation system is set up at Hyderabad's airport.
From the Hindustan Times, India responds to Pakistani allegations.
From ANI, in the Indian state of Himachal Pradesh, a Nigerian is held for not having a passport or a visa. (Enforcing immigration laws......what a concept.)
From India Today, the government of the state of Maharashtra grants citizenship to 23 migrants from Pakistan who had been in India on long-term visas.
From the Colombo Page, eight Sri Lankan cabinet ministers receive complaints for failing to disclose their assets.
From The Herald, U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham is urged to apologize for posing with Dutch politician Geert Wilders.
From DNA, Pakistan's ISI holds meetings with terror groups in Islamabad.
From The Siasat Daily, Italy issues arrest warrants for 10 people in an anti-terrorism operation.
From The Jakarta Post, blaming alleged provocateurs for problems in Papua ignore the Papuan people.
From The Straits Times, Japan may have to dump contaminated water from the Fukushima power plant into the Pacific Ocean.
From the Borneo Post, Malaysian police warn against promoting illegal modifications to motorcycles.
From Free Malaysia Today, police in the Malaysian states of Johor and Selangor arrest foreigners attending functions hosted by Shiite Muslims.
From The Mainichi, more on the possible dumping of contaminated water from Fukushima into the Pacific.
From Gatestone Institute, will Denmark become the next Sweden?
From The Stream, five things which pastors should stop doing.
From Campus Reform, the University of Texas eliminates free speech zones, which leftist students don't appreciate.
From The Blaze, after a seven-year-old boy donates his birthday money to victims of Hurricane Dorian, Disney land gives his family a free trip.
From the Daily Caller, a Maryland sheriff "flames" a neighboring county for enabling illegal aliens to commit crimes.
From WPVI-TV, a doctor in Philadelphia searches for the cure to a disease from which he himself is suffering.
From the New York Post, there will be a full harvest moon on Friday the 13th.
And from Breaking Burgh, President Trump hopes for a kinder gentler approach to national security by replacing John Bolton with Lord Voldemort.
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