From Morocco World News, Moroccan inventor Rachid Yazami develops a method for early detection of short circuits in batteries.
From Hürriyet Daily News, Turkish President Erdoğan laments the lack of mosques in Athens, Greece. (I must give him credit for not being hypocritical. I wondered how many churches there are in Ankara, Turkey, and it turns out that there are at least ten of them, although some churches in Turkey "face extinction".)
From Turkish Minute, Turkish social media trolls use a false image to falsely imply that U.S.-based cleric Fethullah Gülen was against the George Floyd demonstrations.
From Rûdaw, Kurdish villagers along the Iraq-Turkey border are tired of the fight between the Turkish military and the PKK.
From The Armenian Reporter, children in the Armenian villages of Kotayk and Tavush will receive tablets.
From In-Cyprus, the Cypriot government condemns vandalism at the Köprülü Mosque in the city of Limassol.
From The Syrian Observer, residents of the Syrian region of Suweida protest against living conditions and fires that destroyed crops.
From Arutz Sheva, according to Defense Minister Benny Gantz, Israel's democracy is stronger than the coronavirus.
From The Times Of Israel, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu faces his third stint in quarantine as a worker in his office tests positive for the coronavirus.
From The Jerusalem Post, Netanyahu and Gantz clarify their proposed coronavirus legislation.
From the Egypt Independent, Egypt amends the schedule for Cairo's Metro to align with the country's coronavirus curfew.
From Egypt Today, Egypt's ministry of tourism and antiquities launches a virtual tour of the Abu Sega Church.
From the Ethiopian Monitor, the Ethiopian government calls Amnesty International's report on alleged human rights abuses in the region of Oromia "malicious and one-sided".
From the Saudi Gazette, Saudi Arabia's coronavirus protocol requires social distancing in shops and isolation rooms in malls.
From The New Arab, Lebanese activists publish a "protest guide" for American demonstrators.
From Radio Farda, according to foreign ministry spokesman Abbas Musavi, Iran is willing to continue shipping fuel to Venezuela.
From IranWire, FIFA suspends the Iranian Football Federation.
From The Express Tribune, Pakistan's law minister resigns from his post for the second time.
From Pakistan Today, Pakistan's Supreme Court rejects a petition to overturn the Sindh High Court's acquittal of the suspects in the murder of U.S. journalist Daniel Pearl.
From Khaama Press, Afghan President Mohammad Ghani appoints Mahmood Karzai as acting minister of development and land.
From The Hans India, could India adopt a virtual parliament?
From the Hindustan Times, social distancing norms are flouted on the first day of Unlock 1 in the Indian state of West Bengal.
From India Today, travelers going between Maharashtra and Karnataka will be have to be quarantined for seven days.
From the Dhaka Tribune, most of the Bangladeshi cities of Dhaka, Chittagong, Gazipur and Narayangnaj will be designated as coronavirus red zones.
From the Daily Mirror, a Sri Lankan twice rejected for military service in his home country, is a helicopter repairman in the U.S. Army.
From the Colombo Page, Sri Lanka's president and prime minister take the lead against dengue.
From Maldives Insider, Maldivian authorities moves to exercise compulsory purchase power to buy private property to quarantine coronavirus patients.
From the Middle East Monitor, according to a Saudi cleric, protesting is not allowed in Islam.
From The Jakarta Post, Indonesia's trade ministry requires sellers to wear masks, face shields and gloves while doing their jobs.
From The Straits Times, the Philippines lifts its coronavirus lockdown.
From the Borneo Post, barber shops in Malaysia are still not allowed to reopen.
From Free Malaysia Today, a Rohingya man escapes from quarantine in Tanjung Rambutan, Malaysia.
From Vietnam Plus, the Vietnamese company THACO exports semi-trailers to the U.S.
From The Mainichi, was James Bond fluent in Japanese?
And from Gatestone Institute, American policy on Iran has hit its terror allies hard, so let's "hit 'em again, hit 'em again, harder, harder".
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