SEE presents the most dominating headlines for the daily world news. Sunday news hits come as follow:
Trump Slams House's Impeachment Delay As 'So Unfair'
President Donald Trump on Saturday criticized House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi for holding off on sending the articles of impeachment against him to the Senate. (Reuters)
Australian PM Scott Morrison Says He Will 'Accept The Criticism' for Vacationing in Hawaii As Fires Raged Back Home
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison said he regrets being away on vacation with his family as fires raged across South Australia, resulting in the deaths of three people earlier this week. (CNN)
Protests As Belarus-Russia Integration Talks Deepen
Protesters have gathered in Minsk to show their opposition to talks between Russia and Belarus to deepen economic ties. (Euro News)
Protesters Have Gathered in Minsk to Show Their Opposition to Talks Between Russia And Belarus to Deepen Economic Ties.
As the mainstream media pounds Moscow for “vetoing aid for Syria,” Russia’s UN mission says there was no winner in the latest UN battle during which its own draft resolution was defeated by “bias and double standards.” (Russia Today)
Netizens Accuse Indian Prime Minister of Dividing Country with Citizenship Law
India’s controversial Citizenship Act has triggered widespread protests across the country, with thousands of people including students and Bollywood personalities taking to streets. (Sputnik)
Buttigieg Leads 2020 Rivals in Wall Street Contributions
The financial sector, blamed by progressives for spawning the 2008 economic collapse, is lining up behind Pete Buttigieg’s presidential campaign. (USA Today)
People Turn to Robots to Write Their ‘Handwritten’ Cards
Pen-wielding machines can mimic the loops and patterns of the human hand — even your own. But the results can be clumsy and, to some, unsettling. (The Washington Post)
Travis Kalanick Cuts Uber Stake by More Than 90%
Travis Kalanick, Uber’s former chief executive and co-founder, has sold more than $2.5 billion of stock recently, more than 90% of his stake—a pace that if continued could see him sold out entirely in the coming days. (The Wall Street Journal)
US 'Very Concerned' As Conflict Intensifies in Libya
The United States is “very concerned” about the intensification of the conflict in Libya, with a rising number of reported Russian mercenaries supporting warlord Khalifa Haftar’s forces on the ground turning the conflict into a bloodier one, a senior state department official said on Saturday. (The Guardian)