From Free West Media, Italian Interior Minister Luciana Lamorgese wants to abolish security decrees made by her predecessor Matteo Salvini.
From the Malta Independent, the archbishop of Malta recalls a much earlier visitor to the island, who had been shipwrecked.
From Malta Today, according to an opinion column, Maltese politician Adrian Delia can't rebuild his Nationalist Party.
From Total Slovenia News, Slovenia's foreign ministry condemns a campaign by Italian neo-fascists to call World War II Yugoslav Partisans "assassins".
From Total Croatia News, a 19-year-old Croat already owns three companies. (If you read Croatian, read the story at Poslovni Dnevnik.)
From Independent Balkan News Agency, Croatia explains its decision to build a radioactive waste disposal site at Trgovska Gora.
From Balkan Insight, North Macedonia expects a close vote on a law about prosecuting high-profile corruption cases.
From Ekathimerini, Greece plans to speed up to the construction of migrant holding centers.
From the Greek Reporter, Greece launches a campaign to make the highly visited island of Santorini plastic-free.
From Novinite, according to Prime Minister Boyko Borissov, Bulgaria and the U.S. "are allies and strategic partners".
From The Sofia Globe, due to last year's swine flu outbreak, the price of pork in Bulgaria has increased by a third.
From Radio Bulgaria, the Bulgarian Orthodox Church refuses to lend artifacts to an exhibition at the Louvre in Paris.
From Romania-Insider, thieves blow up an ATM in Sinaia, Romania.
From Russia Today, a blogger faces up to five years in prison after pulling a coronavirus-inspired prank on the Moscow Metro.
From Sputnik International, according to Moscow authorities, there has been no spike in radiation levels in the southeastern part of the city.
From The Moscow Times, a court in Penza, Russia sentences anti-fascists up to 18 years in prison on terrorism charges. (If you read Russian, read the story at Mediazona.)
From Hungary Journal, according to Hungarian Prime Minister Orban, some E.U. member states agree to a satisfactory outcome on the E.U. budget.
From Daily News Hungary, Orban meets with German Chancellor Merkel in Berlin.
From Hungary Today, according to Hungarian official Tristan Azbej, the U.S. and Hungary are cooperating to help religious minorities in Iraq. (If you read Hungarian, read the story at Magyar Nemzet.)
From About Hungary, Hungarian Justice Minister Judit Varga signs an initiative from European citizens to protect national regions.
From The Slovak Spectator, western Slovakia could get very windy.
From Radio Prague, Prague is ready to rename a square outside the Russian embassy after slain Russian physicist/politician Boris Nemtsov.
From Polskie Radio, two people are killed when a storm with high winds rips the roof off a building in Bukowina Tatrzańska, Poland.
From Voice Of Europe, Sweden's migration agency expects more asylum seekers in 2020. (If you read Swedish, read the story at Nyheter Idag.)
From Deutsche Welle, could German Chancellor Merkle's party move toward the right?
From EuroNews, Merkel's successor as the leader of the Christian Democratic Union says that she will step down.
From the NL Times, an online petition against anti-Asian discrimination in the Netherlands is signed 25,000 times.
From Dutch News, vandals scrawl anti-Chinese graffiti and smear bodily waste in Wageningen, Netherlands. (If you read Dutch, read the story at AD.)
From VRT NWS, how the storm Ciara upset the lives of Belgians.
From The Brussels Times, Belgium considers allowing voting online for future elections. (If you read Flemish, read the story at Het Laatste Nieuws.)
From France24, Malian President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita admits that his government has opened dialogue with jihadist leaders.
From Euractiv, Marine Le Pen's "far-right" Rassemblement National party is looking for money. (Isn't looking for money what politicians do most of the time?)
From SwissInfo, Switzerland promises more help to Greece in dealing with migrants.
From The Portugal News, tourism is Lisbon is threatened by fake drug dealers.
From the Express, Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn is caught in some unparliamentary behavior.
From the Evening Standard, the U.K. government continues to defend its plans to deport 50 people to Jamaica, while protesters hail a Court of Appeals invention against the deportation.
From the (U.K.) Independent, the man who launched an "Allahu akbar" in front of Buckingham Palace in 2017 is convicted of planning other terror attacks.
From the (Irish) Independent, the Irish party Sinn Féin will start efforts to form a government.
From the Irish Examiner, small Irish parties have their say about forming a coalition with Sinn Féin.
From The Conservative Woman, let's talk about boys. (I think that The Beatles once did that.)
And from Snouts in the Trough, some sex offenders get slaps on the wrist in the Republic of Swedistan.
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