From Free West Media, a majority of surveyed Germans believe that democracy in their country is at risk.
From Deutsche Welle, Germany is reportedly ready to spend €75 billion on climate change by 2030.
From the NL Times, the Amsterdam Museum decides to drop the term "golden age".
From Dutch News, vandals spray swastikas and other graffiti onto gravestones in a World War II cemetery in Mierlo, Netherlands.
From EuroNews, two separate protests target London Fashion Week.
From Voice Of Europe, right-wing British activist Tommy Robinson is released from prison.
From the Express, former U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron "rips apart" Boris Johnson's Brexit strategy.
From the Evening Standard, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange will stay in prison after his sentence ends, due to fears that he may run away.
From the (U.K.) Independent, Boris Johnson's proposed bridge between Scotland and Northern Ireland "could be a good idea".
From the (Irish) Independent, a Syrian man now living in Turkey, who applied for an Irish visa, is in limbo because his ID documents are back in Syria. (You could say that this man truly is an "undocumented" immigrant.)
From the Irish Examiner, a migrant group thinks that Ireland should more than double its intake of migrants.
From France24, as e-cigarettes lose their favor with U.S. President Trump, they remain popular in France.
From El País, Spanish acting Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez rejects an offer to form a "trial coalition" with the left-wing Podemos party.
From The Portugal News, nine out of ten Portuguese citizens regard climate change as a "very serious problem".
From the Malta Independent, Malta may have been one of the first places where beds were used.
From Malta Today, the problem with trusting green growth to fix climate change.
From Total Croatia News, Austria is grateful to Croatia for protecting the E.U.'s borders.
From Ekathimerini, the Greek coast guard rescues 12 kayakers from Israel caught in high winds in the Aegean Sea.
From the Greek Reporter, a report by CBS uncovers an operation to smuggle ISIS members into Europe.
From Novinite, the first hydrogen refueling stations are expected to be operational in Bulgaria by the end of 2020.
From The Sofia Globe, Russia is "concerned" by espionage charges against a Bulgarian Russophile.
From Romania-Insider, ten bad luck superstitions in Romania, and a few for good luck.
From Russia Today, Russia will reportedly build its own carriers in Crimea.
From Sputnik International, the Baikonur Cosmodrome gets ready to launch the last Russian rocket that includes Ukrainian parts.
From The Moscow Times, Russia sets preconditions for peace talks with Ukraine.
From the Hungary Journal, according to Prime Minister Orban, Hungary has sent an "excellent man" to the European Commission.
From Daily News Hungary, drugs dealers operate out of a cave in Budapest.
From Hungary Today, some Hungarian superstitions for Friday the 13th.
From About Hungary, according to a Hungarian official, the fate of nations rests on how well they protect their citizens from infectious diseases.
From The Slovak Spectator, robots can save lives or destroy them.
From Radio Prague, archaeologists in Lety, Czech Republic discover graves of Roma persecuted during World War II.
From Radio Poland, children from orphanages and poor families benefit from a fundraiser named after an American president.
From the CPH Post, vandals delay the opening of a new Copenhagen metro line.
And from The Conservative Woman, "overheard at Boris and Carrie's".
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