From Morocco World News, eight people have died in floods in the Moroccan province of Errachidia.
From Hürriyet Daily News, according to Turkish President Erdoğan, Ankara will resolve remaining issue with the safe zone in Syria in a "few weeks".
From Rûdaw, Iraq will adhere to oil production cuts set by OPEC.
From Arutz Sheva, a building in Tehran, Iran is found to have traces of uranium, backing up an Israeli claim.
From The Times Of Israel, a rocket is fired from Gaza at southern Israel.
From The Jerusalem Post, Qatari youths attack Jewish students in Warsaw, Poland.
From Egypt Today, Egypt's Aswan Governate identifies Nubians entitled to compensation due to the construction of the Aswan Dam.
From Radio Farda, the U.S. will keep its oil sanction on Iran, which admits that its tanker unloaded oil.
From IranWire, Iran sentences seven labor activists to 110 years of prison.
From Dawn, a police sub-inspector in Pakpattan, Pakistan is suspended for allegedly manhandling a visitor to a shrine.
From The Express Tribune, Pakistan urge the U.S. and the Taliban to resume their talks.
From Pakistan Today, Pakistan's Foreign Office rejects India's claim of "normalcy" in Indian-controlled Kashmir.
From Khaama Press, in Afghanistan's province of Maidan Warduk, security forces send dozens of terrorists to their virgins.
From The Hans India, the Indian Space Research Organization locates the lander Vikram from the spacecraft Chandrayaan-2, but do not yet reestablish contact.
From ANI, authorities claim that 91 percent of the Kashmir region is "free of day-time restrictions".
From the Daily Mirror, Australian victims of the Easter Sunday attacks are offered compensation.
From the Colombo Page, the Sri Lankan navy is accused to chasing 2,000 Tamil Nadu fishermen from Sri Lankan waters. (Tamal Nadu is a state in India.)
From Zaman Al Wasl, stray bullets from Turkish border guards kill a woman in a Syrian refugee camp.
From GMA News, ISIS claims responsibility for an explosion at a market in Sultan Kudarat, Philippines.
From The Guardian, police find a "huge" arms cache in Coventry, England linked to the banned terrorist group al-Muhajiroun.
From Gatestone Institute, the media looks the other way as Christians are massacred.
From The Jakarta Post, the Indonesian province of North Sumatra commits to decrease greenhouse gas emissions.
From The Straits Times, Hong Kong protesters trash a metro station and call on the U.S. to "liberate" the territory.
From the Borneo Post, the Malaysian government studies a proposal to replace their air force's fighter jets.
From Free Malaysia Today, the Malaysian state of Sarawak allocates money for non-Islamic religions.
From The Mainichi, a department store in Hiroshima prepares to unveil terra cotta pieces that were part of its exterior decorations when the U.S. atomic bomb struck the city.
And from The Epoch Times, an Australian staying in a hotel in Manchester, England pays way too much for a beer.
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