WHO says first five patients evacuated via Gaza's Rafah crossing

GENEVA, Feb 3 (Reuters) - A World Health Organization official said on Tuesday that the ​first five patients were transferred through ‌Gaza's Rafah crossing with Egypt, which reopened on Monday.

Reuters

"On ‌the second of February, WHO and partners supported the medical evacuation of five patients and seven companions to Egypt via the Rafah crossing," ⁠said WHO spokesperson ‌Christian Lindmeier.

"It was the first medical evacuation through this route since sometime ‍in 2025," he said referring to a limited number of evacuations during an early 2025 ceasefire.

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Over 18,500 ​patients are awaiting evacuations after the two-year ‌war, he said, with trauma injuries from the war as well as chronic conditions such as cancer and diabetes.

A UNICEF spokesperson said that more than 3,000 of them were children. ⁠Gaza health authorities are ​choosing whom to prioritise among ​the sick and wounded, Lindmeier said.

"We know that patients have died basically waiting ‍for evacuation, ⁠and that's something which is horrible when you know just a few miles or ⁠kilometers outside that border, help is available," he added.

(Reporting ‌by Emma Farge, editing by Thomas ‌Seythal and Madeline Chambers)

WHO says first five patients evacuated via Gaza's Rafah crossing

GENEVA, Feb 3 (Reuters) - A World Health Organization official said on Tuesday that the ​first five patients were transfe...
Soldiers, snow plows in Japan battle deadly winter storms

TOKYO, Feb 3 (Reuters) - Soldiers and swarms of snow plows battled in Japan on Tuesday to clear ​record-breaking snowfalls that have buried some northern and ‌western cities, as the death toll rose to 30 from winter ‌storms.

Japan regularly receives some of the highest snowfall in the world, making it a top destination for winter sports, but this year's bitter conditions could dent turnout in Sunday's ⁠general elections, the first ‌in 36 years scheduled in midwinter.

Troops from the Self-Defence Forces were drafted in to help ‍authorities struggling to clear a nearly 2-m (7-ft) pileup of snow in the city of Aomori, the biggest seen in four decades.

About ​1,000 snow plows began trying to push snow ‌off 3,800 km (2,300 miles) of roads in Sapporo, the largest city in the Hokkaido region, broadcaster Nippon TV said.

The scale of this year's snowfall temporarily closed Hokkaido's main airport last week, stranding hundreds of passengers, while snarling other ⁠travel, delaying train services and forcing ​the closure of some highways.

More ​than 100 people have suffered serious injury nationwide in snow-related incidents since January 20, while 30 ‍have died, figures ⁠from the disaster management agency show.

The agency did not specify the manner of death, but domestic media ⁠have reported falls from rooftops as people tried to clear away ‌massive mounds.

(Reporting by Rikako Maruyama; Writing by John ‌Geddie; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

Soldiers, snow plows in Japan battle deadly winter storms

TOKYO, Feb 3 (Reuters) - Soldiers and swarms of snow plows battled in Japan on Tuesday to clear ​record-breaking snowfall...
French prosecutors seek to ban Marine Le Pen from office, jeopardizing her 2027 presidential bid

PARIS (AP) — French prosecutors will seek to ban far-right leader Marine Le Pen and officials from her National Rally party from holding office, putting her 2027 presidential bidat stake.

Associated Press

Le Pen, 57, is seeking to overturn a March 2025 ruling thatfound her guiltyof misusing European Parliament funds in the hiring of aides from 2004 to 2016. During the crucial appeal trial that started last month, Le Pen acknowledged some people performed work for her party, then known as the National Front, while being paid as EU parliamentary aides, calling it "a mistake."

One of the prosecutors, Thierry Ramonatxo, said Tuesday the alleged misappropriation of public funds represents "a very serious breach of probity" that gave the party "a concrete advantage in the form of substantial savings made at the expense of the European Parliament."

Ramonatxo said prosecutors would requesta key Paris appealscourt to find party officials guilty and ask for a ban on elected office. Details of the sentences to be requested are expected later on Tuesday.

Stéphane Madoz-Blanchet, another prosecutor, denounced "a system" set by party leaders. "The acts of misappropriation of public funds were deliberately and carefully concealed," he said.

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The appeal trial, involving Le Pen, 10 other defendants and the National Rally party as a legal entity, is scheduled to last until next week. The court is expected to announce its verdict later, possibly before summer.

Speaking to journalists in the courtroom Tuesday, Le Pen said: "I never expect a pleasant surprise when I set foot in a courtroom."

"I'm not the one who decides. I don't hold the cards," she added.

Le Pen was seen as the potential front-runner to succeed President Emmanuel Macron in the 2027 election until last year's ruling, whichsent shock wavesthrough French politics.

Several scenarios are possible, from acquittal to another conviction that may bar Le Pen from running in 2027. She also could face an even tougher punishment if convicted anew — up to 10 years in prison and a fine of 1 million euros ($1.17 million).

If she becomes ineligible, she has designated her 30-year-old protégé, Jordan Bardella, as her successor in the presidential bid.

French prosecutors seek to ban Marine Le Pen from office, jeopardizing her 2027 presidential bid

PARIS (AP) — French prosecutors will seek to ban far-right leader Marine Le Pen and officials from her National Rally par...
Commission sues Trump administration over refusal to restore New York tunnel funding

By David Shepardson

WASHINGTON, Feb 3 (Reuters) - The commission overseeing a massive $16 billion Hudson River tunnel, the linchpin of rail travel between New York and New Jersey, filed suit to force the Trump administration to ​restore funding just days before construction is set to halt on Friday.

U.S. President Donald Trump said in October ‌he had terminated the project and the Transportation Department has refused to release any funding for the project approved during the prior administration.

The Gateway Development ‌Commission, created by New York and New Jersey in 2019 to oversee the project, filed suit late Monday in the U.S. Court of Claims, saying the U.S. Transportation Department breached its contractual obligations by withholding more than $205 million without any legal basis and was seeking to punish Democrats over last fall's government shutdown.

The commission's suit said that, without federal funding this week, it "will be ⁠unable to pay its contractors to continue ‌construction activities, causing work on this critical project to grind to a halt—leaving unfinished work sites with massive holes in the ground, threatening the livelihoods of the many hundreds of construction ‍employees working on the project, burdening GDC with astronomical costs in delays and penalties, and putting into question the future viability of the project."

The White House and USDOT did not immediately comment, but the White House said last week that Democrats "are standing in the way ​of a deal for the Gateway Tunnel Project by refusing to negotiate with the Trump administration. There is nothing ‌stopping Democrats from prioritizing the interests of Americans over illegal aliens and getting this project back on track."

Democratic Senator Chuck Schumer of New York said the "lawsuit would be unnecessary if President Trump did the right thing for New York and New Jersey and lifted his arbitrary freeze."

Trump's Republican administration has repeatedly targeted major transit and infrastructure projects in Democratic-led states. New York Governor Kathy Hochul and New Jersey Governor Mikie Sherrill -- both Democrats -- praised the lawsuit and urged Trump to relent.

Any failure ⁠of the existing Hudson tunnel, which was built in 1910 and ​heavily damaged by Hurricane Sandy in 2012, would hobble commuting in the ​metropolitan area that produces 10% of the country's economic output and is used by 200,000 travelers daily.

Nearly $2 billion has been spent on the project. The initiative, which received about $15 billion in federal support -- ‍involves repairs to an existing ⁠tunnel and the construction of a new one for passenger railroad Amtrak and state commuter lines between New Jersey and Manhattan.

Gateway said it told USDOT that it was in compliance with federal law.

Trump, a former New York ⁠City real estate developer, refused to approve funding for the project in his first term. The Trump administration is also trying to kill Manhattan's congestion pricing ‌program introduced last year, designed to reduce traffic and raise billions in funds for mass transit.

(Reporting by David ‌Shepardson in Washington; Editing by Christian Schmollinger and Michael Perry)

Commission sues Trump administration over refusal to restore New York tunnel funding

By David Shepardson WASHINGTON, Feb 3 (Reuters) - The commission overseeing a massive $16 billion Hudson River t...
The door handle on a 2018 Tesla Model 3 electric vehicle pictured in Cardiff, California on June 1, 2018. - Mike Blake/Reuters

Chinais banning hidden door handles on all cars sold in the country, becoming the first country in the world to target the feature – which was popularized by Tesla but has for years drawn concern over safety risks.

The hidden door handles are a signature feature of Tesla's vehicles, and the ban comes as Elon Musk's company reports declining worldwide sales and struggles with fierce competition in China, its second-biggest market.

On the outside, electric door handles sit flush against the side of the door, requiring a user to press down on the handle to release the lever; from the inside, riders press a button to open the door again.

Though Tesla is the company best-known for this type of door handle, otherelectric vehicle makers in China haveadopted similar designs, including some models by heavyweights Xiaomi and Aion.

The new policy, which does not single out any specific company, now demands that all cars sold in China must have a mechanical release feature for both interior and exterior door handles.

In a statement released Monday, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology cited "the inconvenience with operating the exterior door handles and their inability to open after an accident," and laid out specific requirements for how these handles should function.

Exterior door handles should have enough space for a hand to operate its mechanical release from any angle. And interior handles should be "clearly visible from the corresponding occupant's position," it said.

The new rules come into effect on January 1, 2027.

CNN has reached out to Xiaomi, Aion, and Tesla for comment on the new regulations.

The feature has previously come under heavy scrutiny, both in China and elsewhere.

Last September, Tesla said it waslooking into redesigningthe way to open its car doors in an emergency, after several accidents where passengers were reportedly killed or severely injured in burning vehicles because rescuers could not open them.

Other Tesla owners have reported having to break their own car windows after buckling their children in and then being unable to get in the car again, according to aninvestigationby the US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

An investigation byBloombergfound 140 incidents of people being trapped in their Teslas due to problems with the door handles, including several that resulted in horrific injuries.

Tesla cars do have a manual door release inside the vehicle, for when the regular handles fail.

Similar problems have cropped up in China. Xiaomi saw its stock value tumble last year after a fatal crash involving its sedan killed three people in March – with local media and government-affiliated outlets reporting there had been issues unlocking the car door.

Afterward, the Chinese governmenttightened rulesaround the marketing and testing of driver-assistance features.

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China to ban hidden car door handles made popular by Tesla in world first

Chinais banning hidden door handles on all cars sold in the country, becoming the first country in the world to target the feature – which ...

 

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