From Morocco World News, a non-profit organization based in Rabat vaccinates 600 dogs in rural Morocco against rabies.
From Hürriyet Daily News, Turkey's government works to grant new licenses to Turkish Petroleum Corporation after a deal with Libya.
From Turkish Minute, 40 Turkish policemen are detained over alleged Gülen links.
From Rûdaw, protesters in Baghdad's Tahrir Square want all foreign troops to leave Iraq, including both American and Iranian.
From In-Cyprus, Cyprus is accused of blocking new E.U. sanctions against Russia.
From The Syrian Observer, Syrian regime forces withdraw from southern parts of the region of Idleb.
From Arutz Sheva, an earthquake striking in eastern Turkey is felt in Israel.
From The Times Of Israel, Blue and White party leader Benny Gantz declines an invitation from U.S. President Trump to visit Washington.
From The Jerusalem Post, Yad Vashem and Facebook team up to commemorate victims of the Holocaust.
From YNetNews, Trump says that he will unveil his peace plan before Gantz and Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu arrive in the U.S. (As noted above, Gantz does not intend to arrive.)
From the Egypt Independent, researchers reproduce the vocal tract of a 3,000-year-old mummified Egyptian priest.
From Egypt Today, according to an International Organization for Migration official, illegal immigration in Egypt has almost disappeared.
From StepFeed, female ministers in Lebanon's new government are already being harassed and objectified.
From The New Arab, a mosque in Jerusalem is burned and vandalized, allegedly by Israeli extremists. (The article cites, but does not link to, Haaretz and The Times Of Israel.)
From Radio Farda, Iran and Russia condemn threats to kill the successor of terrorist leader Qasim Suleymani.
From The Express Tribune, Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan urges Pakistanis to take to the streets on Kashmir Day.
From Pakistan Today, the Assembly Speaker of Balochistan calls his government the worst in the province's history.
From The Hans India, an Indian activist announces protests against the Citizenship Act for January 30th.
From the Hindustan Times, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi praises 49 children who won national awards.
From India Today, India successfully fires a nuclear-capable missile from a submarine, for the second time in five days.
From the Dhaka Tribune, Bangladesh observes Mass Upsurge Day.
From the Daily Mirror, SriLankan Airlines implements precautionary measures to mitigate risks arising from the coronavirus outbreak.
From the Colombo Page, the Sri Lankan embassy in China seeks to evacuate Sri Lankans residing in the city of Wuhan.
From the Daily Beast, a critic of the Saudi Arabian government claims that its agents tried to kidnap him in the U.S. (via Business Insider)
From The Jakarta Post, the Indonesian government gets ready to conduct its 2020 census.
From The Straits Times, eight Chinese tourists held in Johor Baru, Malaysia test negative for the coronavirus.
From the Borneo Post, a patient in the Malaysian state of Sabah tests negative for the coronavirus.
From Free Malaysia Today, 10 sitarists in Petaling Jaya, Malaysia play the Chinese New Year song.
From The Mainichi, Japan's public and private sectors step up their efforts to curb the coronavirus.
And from Gatestone Institute, will Sweden and its welfare system survive mass migration?
No comments:
Post a Comment