From National Review, a new book shows what resistance really looks like.
From The Washington Free Beacon, the U.S. and the Taliban sign a truce that could end the war in Afghanistan.
From the Washington Examiner, five things to watch for in the Democratic primary in South Carolina.
From The Federalist, former Vice President Biden might win in South Carolina but lose the fight for the Democratic party.
From American Thinker, "Castrocare" killed Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez.
From LifeZette, congresscritter Adam Schiff (D-Cal) lives it up while crime and homelessness run rampant in his district.
From NewsBusters, TV host Jimmy Kimmel "slobbers" over Schiff.
From Canada Free Press, Pope Francis, in his Global Education Pact, advocates "freedom" from God.
From Global News, a four-year-old boy born with a heart defect plays hockey.
From CTV News, Canada's Public Health Agency considers stronger protection against the coronavirus for front-line workers.
From TeleSUR, Ecuador confirms its first case of the coronavirus, a citizen who returned from Spain.
From The Portugal News, the Portuguese government and the group Bloco de Esquerda have a dispute about lithium.
From France24, to slow the spread of the coronavirus, France bans public indoor gatherings of more than 5,000 people.
From Free West Media, the Gare de Lyon in Paris is evacuated due to clashes between rival Congolese communities.
From Voice Of Europe, Catalan separatists rally with former leader Carles Puigdemont in Perpignan, France.
From SwissInfo, cases of the coronavirus spread to several Swiss cantons.
From the Malta Independent, Maltese farmers block the entrance to the Magħtab landfill to protest plans to expropriate their arable land.
From Malta Today, Maltese Prime Minister Robert Abela talks to farmers staging a sit-in outside the Magħtab facility.
From Total Slovenia News, what the Slovenian magazines Mladina and Reporter are saying this week.
From Total Croatia News, a diver from Split, Croatia will try to set a new world record for walking under water.
From Balkan Insight, Slovaks vote in their parliamentary elections.
From Ekathimerini, according to a government spokesman, Greece has withstood "an organized, mass, illegal attempt to violate its borders".
From the Greek Reporter, more on migrants and refugees trying to enter Greece.
From The Sofia Globe, according to Prime Minister Boyko Borissov, no migration has come through Bulgaria's border with Turkey.
From Radio Bulgaria, an open-air museum near Gabrovo, Bulgaria displays a "Golden Gospel" and a sword which belonged to the voivode Stefan Karadja.
From Russia Today, thousands of people march in Moscow and Saint Petersburg to commemorate former Russian Deputy Prime Minister Boris Nemtsov, who was killed five years ago.
From Sputnik International, five Russians who contacted a coronavirus-infected visitor from Iran are hospitalized in Moscow, but test negative for the virus.
From The Moscow Times, three people at a birthday party in Moscow die after dry ice is tipped into a pool.
From Daily News Hungary, Hungarian Prime Minister Orban and Turkish President Erdoğan discuss the migration situation.
From The Slovak Spectator, the Slovak elections have been calm, except for "several minor incidents".
From Radio Prague, the Czech feminist suffragette who tried to ensure that the principles of equality in the Czechoslovak constitution were put into practice.
From Polskie Radio, the U.S. military conducts maneuvers in Poland.
From Deutsche Welle, unlike most German political parties, the Greens have held together.
From the NL Times, the number of coronavirus patients in the Netherlands rise to six.
From Dutch News, more on the coronavirus patients in the Netherlands.
From VRT NWS, Belgian hotels are hit hard by the coronavirus crisis.
From The Brussels Times, please do not feed the birds any urban junk food.
From the Evening Standard, U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson and his girlfriend Carrie Symonds announce their engagement and her pregnancy.
From the (U.K.) Independent, a claim made by Boris Johnson in 1990 and used in a speech by then-Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher may have led to her downfall.
From the (Irish) Independent, Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald warns Ireland's Green Party against facilitating a Fianna Fáil/Fine Gael coalition government.
From the Irish Examiner, a man is hospitalized after being bit by his pet puff adder, the "first recorded venomous snakebite in Ireland".
From The Conservative Woman, a Quaker leader from Wakefield, England preceded Greta Thunberg as a "prophet of doom" in Bristol by 364 years.
And from Snouts in the Trough, conspiracy theories about the coronavirus.
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