From Gatestone Institute, the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo republishes the Mohammed cartoons.
From Free West Media, according to a poll, a majority of French people approve the republication of the Mohammed cartoons.
From France24, new coronavirus cases in France approach an all-time high.
From The Portugal News, the Portuguese air force delivers two donated organs in 24 hours.
From El País, a judge in the Spanish region of Galicia orders the heirs of the late dictator Francisco Franco to hand over his summer residence.
From SwissInfo, Switzerland applies strict anti-coronavirus measures to mass events.
From Euractiv, the people of Liechtenstein vote against allowing a new rail line between Switzerland and Austria to pass through their country.
From the Malta Independent, Maltese schools will open on September 28th, with everyone over age 11 being required to wear masks.
From Malta Today, an immigrant from Sudan dies after trying to escape from Malta's Ħal Far detention center.
From Total Slovenia News, Slovenia's General Police Administration announces an investigation into alleged illegal conduct by the National Bureau of Investigation's handling of a prostitution case.
From Total Croatia News, experience Dalmatian sunsets on the Croatian island of Koločep, a.k.a. Kalamota.
From Independent Balkan News Agency, political parties in Montenegro point fingers at each other. (For us Americans, that sort of this has become routine.)
From Balkan Insight, North Macedonian ethnic Albanian political leader Ali Ahmeti testifies to Kosovo War prosecutors in The Hague.
From Ekathimerini, obtaining Greek citizenship will require passing a written exam.
From the Greek Reporter, the Moria migrant camp on the Greek island of Lesvos is quarantined after a resident tests positive for the coronavirus.
From Novinite, according to Bulgaria's interior ministry, protesters are breaking paving stones and trying to break through a police cordon.
From The Sofia Globe, 35 of the protesters are arrested and 38 are given medical treatment.
From Radio Bulgaria, protesters throw firecrackers at police.
From Russia Today, according to a Kremlin spokesman, Russia is reducing its reliance on oil and gas.
From Sputnik International, why four islands stand in the way of a peace treaty between Russia and Japan.
From The Moscow Times, according to the German government, Russian dissident Alexey Navalny was poisoned with a substance from the Novichok family.
From Daily News Hungary, a hospital in Miskolc, Hungary is fined for discrimination against Romani mothers.
From Hungary Today, the Hungarian opposition party Jobbik cancels a meeting due to the coronavirus.
From About Hungary, according to Hungarian Prime Minister Orban, Hungary and Slovenia are working to ensure long-term cooperation.
From The Slovak Spectator, 7,000-year-old artifacts are found near a house in Suchá nad Parnou, Slovakia.
From Radio Prague, the Czech national soccer team will play in Slovakia despite one member testing positive for the coronavirus.
From Polskie Radio, Polish prosecutors open an investigation after a sewage plant in Warsaw malfunctions and dumps sewage into the Vistula River.
From the CPH Post, some large Danish companies cancel their Christmas parties due to the coronavirus.
From Deutsche Welle, how a church in Berlin is posthumously reinstating a gay clergyman.
From Allah's Willing Executioners, while conducting a service, a priest in Berlin is attacked by a "Mediterranean man".
From the NL Times, a quay wall in front of a building at the University of Amsterdam collapses.
From Dutch News, the Dutch health council approves the roll-out of 5G telecom service, but some of its aspects require more research.
From VRT NWS, the widow of the Slovak businessman who died after being arrested at the Charleroi Airport speaks about what happened to her husband.
From The Brussels Times, Ghent, Belgium expands its requirement to wear face masks.
From the Express, U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson is urged to ignore Scottish leader Nicola Sturgeon's demands for a second independence referendum.
From the Evening Standard, the songs Rule Britannia and Land of Hope and Glory will be sung during the BBC show Last Night at the Proms.
From the (U.K.) Independent, a record 409 migrants cross the English Channel to Great Britain in a single day.
From the (Irish) Independent, a primary school in Ireland's County Clare is closed after several staff members come into contact with a person with the coronavirus.
From the Irish Examiner, Irish Taoiseach Micheál Martin appoints his third agriculture minister in 67 days.
And from The Conservative Woman, the science behind face masks is as flimsy as a see-through scarf.
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