From Free West Media, 200 "youths" clash with police in Sables-d'Olonne, France, but none are arrested.
From El País, former Catalan Premier Jordi Pujol, his wife and their seven children face trial for allegedly taking bribes.
From The Portugal News, Prime Minister António offers Portuguese face masks to other European leaders.
From SwissInfo, Turkey's decision to turn the Hagia Sophia back into a mosque has fallout in Switzerland.
From the Malta Independent, Malta's Nationalist Party sees an increase in membership and renewal applications.
From Malta Today, 63 migrants rescued from a sinking boat are brought to Malta.
From Total Slovenia News, Slovenian President Borut Pahor defends his visit to the Foiba memorial and discusses the return of the National Hall in Trieste, Italy to the Slovenian minority.
From Total Croatia News, where in Croatia to take your dog to the beach.
From Independent Balkan News Agency, President Hashim Thaci returns to Kosovo after four days of being interrogated in The Hague.
From Balkan Insight, a man building a house in Bugojno, Bosnia and Herzegovina finds the remains of at least two people, believed to have been held at the Rostovo detention camp.
From Ekathimerini, authorities on the Greek island of Corfu arrest four Ukrainians for allegedly smuggling migrants.
From the Greek Reporter, for the first time, the theater in Epidaurus, Greece will live-stream an ancient Greek play. (I visited this theater during my trip to Greece in 1999.)
From Novinite, according to Minister of Education Krassimir Valchev, the school year in Bulgaria will start in person, with quarantined children joining online.
From The Sofia Globe, Bulgarian state railways invites the public to vote on a design for its new Siemens Smartron locomotives.
From Radio Bulgaria, protesters in Sofia, Bulgaria keep going for the ninth straight day.
From Romania-Insider, the city of Cluj-Napoca opens Romania's first smart street.
From Sputnik International, Russia coronavirus vaccine developers say that they're ready to share their data with foreign colleagues.
From The Moscow Times, a couple in the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad are on trial for allegedly sharing states secrets because a secret agent appeared in their wedding photos.
From Daily News Hungary, police in Miskolc, Hungary bust a stolen luxury car racket.
From Hungary Today, a 6,500-year-old statuette known as the "Venus of Egerszeg" is exhibited at the Göcsej Museum.
From About Hungary, Hungary will agree to the E.U.'s coronavirus rescue package on one condition.
From The Slovak Spectator, coronavirus-related aid in Slovakia did not go to the sectors hardest hit by the economic effects from the virus.
From Radio Prague, the wearing of face masks indoors and on public transportation is again mandatory in the Czech regions of Moravia and Silesia.
From Polskie Radio, two Polish government employees are fired after allowing a hoax phone call to reach President Andrzej Duda.
From the CPH Post, Denmark eases its travel restrictions for parts of Sweden.
From Deutsche Welle, Germany's Constitutional Court rules that police have too much access to personal data from internet and iphone users.
From EuroNews, German police apprehend the Black Forest "Rambo".
From the NL Times, Dutch King Willem Alexander is undecided on whether to use a carriage because it is decorated with a colonialist painting.
From Dutch News, the Dutch government allows "sweetheart visas".
From VRT NWS, for July 21st celebrations, "please don't come to Brussels".
From The Brussels Times, which services will be closed in Belgium this coming Monday?
From the Express, new data shows the coronavirus reproduction rate is at 1 everywhere in England except for one area.
From the (U.K.) Independent, a Metropolitan Police officer is suspended after a video shows a handcuffed man shouting "get off my neck".
From the (Irish) Independent, an Irish businessman has been barred from leaving China for the past 16 months.
From The Conservative Woman, 1984 is almost upon us.
And from Snouts in the Trough, it can be difficult parking a car with a bag over your head.
No comments:
Post a Comment