From Free West Media, an attack by a migrant gang on a white teenager in Gorinchem, Netherlands shocks that country.
From the NL Times, Shell Oil goes to court to keep Greenpeace protesters away from its platforms in the North Sea.
From Dutch News, Dutch farmers stage a new motorway protest.
From VRT NWS, Belgium launches a cyber-attack on ISIS media outlets.
From Deutsche Welle, a Russian polar bear gives birth to two cubs in a zoo in Hanover, but one dies shortly afterwards.
From the CPH Post, Denmark has less obesity than other E.U. countries.
From Polskie Radio, according to Polish President Andrzej Duda, the Baltic Pipe pipeline between Poland and Denmark is "strategic for energy security".
From Radio Prague, Czech troops finish their mission at the Bagram military base and will focus on supporting Afghanistan's special forces.
From The Slovak Spectator, money collected at the Christmas Bazaar in Bratislava, Slovakia will go to charity.
From the Hungary Journal, according to Foreign Minister Szijjarto, Hungary will get a "crucial" portfolio in the new European Commission.
From Daily News Hungary, the Hungarian opposition party Jobbik proposes broader police powers in cases of domestic violence.
From Hungary Today, Hungary's National Police Force launches a campaign against domestic violence.
From About Hungary, the truth about Hungary's policy on families and the "image of women".
From Russia Today, in Samara, Russia, a car fire is put out in a way that is literally crappy.
From The Moscow Times, Russia's space agency Roscosmos plans to send "centaur robots" into space.
From Romania-Insider, an environmental NGO starts reintroducing European bison into Romania's Făgăraș Mountains.
From Novinite, the European Commission approves €94 million for a new co-generation power plant in Bulgaria.
From The Sofia Globe, Bulgarian Prime Minister Borissov meets U.S. President Trump in Washington, D.C., U.S.
From Radio Bulgaria, Bulgarian media from around the world hold a meeting.
From Ekathimerini, the Greek Parliament approves nine constitutional amendments.
From the Greek Reporter, despite bad weather, 2,793 new migrants and refugees arrive in Greece from Turkey in seven days.
From Independent Balkan News Agency, despite losing the presidential election, Romanian politician Viorica Dancila will not resign as her party's leader.
From Total Croatia News, amendments to Croatia's criminal code show that violence against women is unacceptable.
From the Malta Independence, as previously planned, another protest takes place in front of the Maltese parliament.
From Malta Today, Maltese Prime Minister Joseph Muscat calls for a parliamentary confidence vote and wins it.
From ANSA, Italian researchers discover a molecule that blocks the development of Alzheimer's disease.
From El País, a "narco-submarine" coming from Colombia is caught by Spanish authorities, carrying 3,000 kilos of she-don't-lie.
From The Portugal News, UNESCO declares next May 5 as World Portuguese Language Day.
From Euractiv, the E.U.'s member states give the new European Commission to start working even though the U.K. has not sent any commissioner. (Since the U.K. is trying to leave the E.U., what would be the point of the U.K. sending a commissioner?)
From the Express, Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn unveils a "staggeringly hypocritical" plan to teach school children about racism in the British Empire.
From the Evening Standard, the truck driver in whose vehicle 39 people were found dead in Essex, England appears in court.
From the Independent, the BBC admits it made a "mistake" by editing a video of U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson.
From the Irish Examiner, police in Newry, Ireland issue a warning after a child picked up component parts of a bomb.
And from The Conservative Woman, "a dispatch from the gender minefield".
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