China to ban 'hidden' car door handles to address safety fears

BEIJING, Feb 3 (Reuters) - China will ban 'hidden' car door handles from 2027, becoming the first country to phase out a design ​pioneered by Tesla and adopted by Chinese competitors including Xiaomi.

Reuters The door handle on a 2018 Tesla Model 3 electric vehicle is shown in this photo illustration taken in Cardiff, California, U.S., June 1, 2018. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo Tesla's new Model 3 sedan is seen displayed at the China International Fair for Trade in Services (CIFTIS) in Beijing, China September 2, 2023. REUTERS/Florence Lo

The door handle on a 2018 Tesla Model 3 electric vehicle is shown in Cardiff, California

The ‌hidden handle design, which functions through a key fob or mobile phone or by ‌manually pressing it, has drawn scrutiny in both the United States and China over potential safety risks.

Last year, the U.S. auto safety agency opened a defect probe into Tesla Model 3 sedan's emergency door release controls. Tesla, ⁠which did not comment ‌on the investigation at the time, did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Tuesday.

China's industry ministry ‍said on Monday that under its new safety technical requirements, every car door should be equipped with both exterior and interior handles.

Mechanical release designs will be mandatory, ​with innovations such as electrical handles optional.

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China's new policy sets out ‌rules for where handles must be located on the outside of a car and how they should function to ensure that they can be opened in the event of an accident. It also requires interior handles to be clearly visible.

New vehicle models must align their door handle ⁠design with the new regulation from January ​1, 2027 while approved models will come ​under the rules by January 1, 2029, the ministry said.

Chinese state media reported in October that the driver of a ‍Xiaomi SU7 Ultra ⁠sedan died in an accident after passers-by were unable to open the door to pull him out of the burning vehicle.

Xiaomi, which ⁠has not commented publicly on the incident, did not immediately respond to a request ‌for comment on Tuesday.

(Reporting by Qiaoyi Li, Zhang Yan and ‌Brenda Goh; Editing by Alexander Smith)

China to ban 'hidden' car door handles to address safety fears

BEIJING, Feb 3 (Reuters) - China will ban 'hidden' car door handles from 2027, becoming the first country to phas...
Norway parliament supports monarchy despite scandals

OSLO, Feb 3 (Reuters) - Norway's parliament on Tuesday voted overwhelmingly in favour of maintaining the country's monarchy, rejecting a proposed change to a republic, despite recent turmoil in ​the king's family and an opinion poll showing a dip in popular support for ‌the royals.

Reuters

In the long-planned vote, 141 of parliament's 169 members supported the continuation of the monarchy, while 26 members cast ‌ballots in favour of ending the reign of King Harald and his descendants, according to the official tally.

Supporters of the monarchy say the institution brings stability by being above partisan politics and that it has served Norway well since independence from Sweden in 1905.

Republican proponents argue that political power already rests with ⁠Norway's elected parliament and the ‌government, adding that the inherited privilege of the royals does not belong in a democratic society.

"The sponsors seek to amend the constitution so that Norway's head ‍of state is elected by the people, that is, a president," read the now-failed proposal from a group of seven members of parliament representing parties from across the political spectrum.

EPSTEIN APOLOGY

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Still, Crown Princess Mette-Marit was criticised by ​the prime minister on Monday who said she had displayed poor judgement in having contacts ‌with Jeffrey Epstein, following fresh reports of her ties with the late U.S. sex offender.

On Saturday, Mette-Marit, the spouse of the heir to the throne, Haakon, apologised for the contact, which occurred in the years after Epstein was found guilty of child sex crimes in 2008.

An opinion poll conducted on Monday for Norwegian daily Verdens Gang found that 61% of Norwegians favour keeping their royals in ⁠place, down from 72% last year, while support for ​a republic rose 10 percentage points to 27%, the survey ​released on Tuesday showed.

Asked whether Mette-Marit should become Norway's next queen, 44% said no while only 33% said yes, while the rest did not express an opinion, ‍the survey of 1,014 ⁠respondents by polling institute InFact showed.

Separately on Tuesday, Mette-Marit's son from a previous relationship, Marius Hoiby, 29, went on trial. He has been accused of rape, domestic violence, assault and ⁠drug possession. He was arrested again at the weekend on suspicion of further crimes.

Hoiby has denied the most serious accusations ‌against him, including those of rape and domestic violence, while admitting to some lesser ‌charges.

(Reporting by Terje Solsvik; Editing by Thomas Derpinghaus)

Norway parliament supports monarchy despite scandals

OSLO, Feb 3 (Reuters) - Norway's parliament on Tuesday voted overwhelmingly in favour of maintaining the country'...
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.

"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.

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...
Spain to ban social media access for children under 16

MADRID, Feb 3 (Reuters) - Spain will ban access to social media for minors under 16 and ​platforms will be required to implement age verification ‌systems, Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said on Tuesday as he announced several ‌measures to guarantee a safe digital environment.

Sanchez's left-wing coalition government has repeatedly complained about the proliferation of hate speech, pornographic content and disinformation on social media, saying it ⁠had negative effects ‌on young people.

"Our children are exposed to a space they were never meant to navigate ‍alone... We will no longer accept that," Sanchez said as he addressed the World Government Summit in Dubai, calling on other ​European countries to implement similar measures.

"We will protect ‌them from the digital Wild West," he added.

Australia in December became the first country to ban social media for children under 16, a move being closely watched by other countries considering similar age-based measures, such as Britain ⁠and France.

Sanchez said his government would ​also introduce a new bill ​next week to hold social media executives accountable for illegal and hate-speech content, as well as ‍to criminalise ⁠algorithmic manipulation and the amplification of illegal content.

He added that prosecutors would explore ways to investigate possible ⁠legal infractions by Elon Musk's Grok, TikTok and Instagram.

(Reporting by David ‌Latona, Emma Pinedo and Victoria Waldersee; editing by ‌Charlie Devereux and Hugh Lawson)

Spain to ban social media access for children under 16

MADRID, Feb 3 (Reuters) - Spain will ban access to social media for minors under 16 and ​platforms will be required to im...
Russia pounds Ukrainian energy facilities before peace talks

By Max Hunder

KYIV, Feb 3 (Reuters) - Russia pounded Ukrainian energy facilities with hundreds of drones and dozens of missiles on Tuesday, knocking out heating to hundreds of thousands of families in freezing temperatures a day before new peace talks, Ukrainian officials ​said.

The capital Kyiv and Ukraine's second biggest city, Kharkiv, came under fire in overnight airstrikes that Ukraine's energy minister said were ‌spread across eight regions and followed a brief moratorium on attacks on energy facilities.

Russia launched 450 drones and over 70 missiles and at least nine people were wounded in attacks ‌that struck apartment blocks as well as energy infrastructure, Ukrainian officials said. Electricity and heating was knocked out in many areas, with temperatures around or below -20 Celsius (-4 Fahrenheit).

"Taking advantage of the coldest days of winter to terrorise people is more important to Russia than resorting to diplomacy," Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy wrote on Telegram, accusing Moscow of choosing "terror and escalation".

He was referring to talks involving Russian, Ukrainian and U.S. officials scheduled to be held in Abu Dhabi on ⁠Wednesday and Thursday as Washington tries to broker an ‌end to nearly four years of war since Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022.

The first round of trilateral talks in late January led to no movement on the vital question of territory, with Moscow demanding Kyiv cede more land ‍in east Ukraine, which it refuses to do.

Zelenskiy has said that Ukraine, which is struggling to stop grinding Russian advances on the battlefield, was ready for "substantive" talks. Moscow and Kyiv blame each other for the failure to agree a peace deal.

SUB-ZERO TEMPERATURES

Kyiv is under U.S. pressure to agree to a peace deal while attacks by Russia on ​Ukraine's energy system appear intended to freeze it into submission during one of the coldest winters in years.

Russia and Ukraine said last week ‌they had halted strikes on each other's energy infrastructure, but they disagreed on the timeframe for the moratorium and there were again widespread attacks on Ukrainian energy facilities overnight.

Among the infrastructure that was hit overnight were facilities to heat water for distribution to Ukrainian homes.

"Hundreds of thousands of families, including children, were deliberately left without heating during the harshest winter conditions, with temperatures dropping to −25 °C," Energy Minister Denys Shmyhal wrote on X.

In Kyiv, Reuters reporters heard a series of loud explosions after midnight.

Local authorities said 1,170 apartment blocks in the capital had been left without heating by the attack.

The ⁠strikes caused damage in five Kyiv districts, hitting three apartment blocks and a ​building housing a kindergarten, Tymur Tkachenko, head of the city's military administration, said on Telegram.

Flames ​consumed an apartment on the upper floors of a Kyiv building in videos posted on social media. An air raid alert stayed in effect for more than five hours.

In the northeastern city of Kharkiv, Mayor Ihor Terekhov said the attacks ‍targeted energy infrastructure, leaving over 800 ⁠buildings without heat, as water was drained from radiator systems to stop them freezing in the bitter cold.

"The goal is obvious: to cause maximum destruction and leave the city without heat in severe cold," Terekhov wrote on Telegram.

Deputy Prime Minister Oleksiy Kuleba said 110,000 properties ⁠in Kharkiv were left without heating after the attack.

Public broadcaster Suspilne also said Russian strikes had knocked out electricity in two towns in the Kharkiv region, Izium and Balakliia, ‌and struck two apartment buildings in the northern city of Sumy.

(Reporting by Max Hunder; additonal reporting by Gleb Garanich and Valentyn ‌Ogirenko; Writing by Ron Popeski; Editing by Daniel Flynn and Timothy Heritage)

Russia pounds Ukrainian energy facilities before peace talks

By Max Hunder KYIV, Feb 3 (Reuters) - Russia pounded Ukrainian energy facilities with hundreds of drones and doz...
Trump's tariff cut spells relief in India despite scant details

By Shivangi Acharya and Manoj Kumar

Reuters

NEW DELHI, Feb 3 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump's move to slash tariffs on Indian imports sparked a relief rally across the Asian country's markets on Tuesday, lifting sentiment among exporters and policymakers even ​as details of the agreement remained scant.

Trump announced a trade deal with India on Monday to cut tariffs to 18% from ‌50% in exchange for New Delhi halting Russian oil purchases and lowering trade barriers.

But Trump's social media post was not followed by any details of the deal from ‌the White House or the Indian government.

An Indian government official said India has agreed to buy petroleum, defence goods and aircraft from the U.S., while partly opening up its guarded agriculture sector under the agreement.

New Delhi has also lowered tariffs on imported cars to address Washington's immediate demands, according to the official.

Trump said India will buy more American goods with purchases rising to over $500 billion, including energy, coal, technology, agricultural and other ⁠products. He did not specify any time-frame.

"India's tariff ‌agreement with the U.S. removes its earlier disadvantage versus peers," said Neelkanth Mishra, chief economist at Axis Bank.

The deal helps affected Indian gems and jewellery, leather, plastics, ceramics and auto components and non-tech foreign investment, he ‍added.

Among Asian peers, U.S. tariffs on goods from Indonesia stand at 19% while the rate for Vietnam and Bangladesh stands at 20%.

India's exports to the U.S. rose 15.88% year-on-year to $85.5 billion in January-November, while imports stood at $46.08 billion, Indian government data showed.

The announcement of the trade deal has reduced a great deal of ​global uncertainty, India's economic affairs secretary, Anuradha Thakur, said at an event in New Delhi on Tuesday.

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It also lifted investor sentiment. ‌India's benchmark stock index, the Nifty 50, was up nearly 3% and the rupee climbed over 1% to 90.40 per dollar in early trading.

"Lower tariffs will not only improve price competitiveness but also help Indian exporters integrate more deeply into U.S. supply chains," said S.C. Ralhan, president of the Federation of Indian Export Organisations.

Reduction in U.S. tariffs on most Indian goods will reinvigorate India's exports to the U.S., Moody's Ratings said in a statement.

DEAL DETAILS SCANT

Despite the announcement by Trump and a post on X from Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, details of ⁠the deal remain scant.

Indian refiners will need a wind-down period to complete Russian ​oil deals before imports from that country can be halted, and they have so ​far not been ordered by the government to stop such imports, Reuters reported.

The Kremlin said it had heard no statements from India about halting purchases of Russian oil.

Moody's said immediately stopping Russian oil imports could be disruptive ‍to India's economic growth.

"A complete shift ⁠toward non-Russian oil could also tighten supply elsewhere, raise prices and pass through to higher inflation given that India is one of the world's largest oil importers," it said.

The India-U.S. trade deal will ensure more exports of American farm products to India's ⁠massive market, U.S. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said in a post on social media, without giving any details.

In the past, India's trade deals have typically excluded some ‌sensitive farm and dairy items, as New Delhi maintains the need to protect millions of subsistence farmers.

(Additional reporting by ‌Nikunj Ohri in New Delhi; Graphics by Vineet Sachdev; Editing byRaju Gopalakrishnan)

Trump's tariff cut spells relief in India despite scant details

By Shivangi Acharya and Manoj Kumar NEW DELHI, Feb 3 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump's move to sla...
Japanese game maker Nintendo reports robust profits on hit Switch 2 console

TOKYO (AP) —Nintendoposted a 51% rise in profit for the first three quarters of the fiscal year as the Japanesevideo-gamemaker continued to score success with its revamped Switch machine.

For the April-December period, Kyoto-based Nintendo Co. said Tuesday that it recorded a 358.9 billion yen ($2.3 billion) profit, up from 237 billion yen the same period a year earlier.

Sales nearly doubled, surging 99%, to 1.9 trillion yen ($12 billion) in the same period, on healthy demand for the Switch 2 console, which went on sale last year.

Switch machines are so-called hybrids, working both as a home console and a portable device. The screen is bigger and the graphics quality has improved in the upgrade.

Nintendo, owner of the Super Mario and Pokemon franchises, stuck to its projection for a 350 billion yen ($2.3 billion) net profit for the fiscal year through March.

It's expecting to sell 19 million Switch 2 machines during the fiscal year. It had already sold nearly 17.4 million Switch 2 machines as of the end of December, the briskest sales rollout for a Nintendo game console.

As for Switch 2 software, Nintendo has sold some 14 million units of the "Mario Kart World" game. Nintendo claims some 129 million people around the world are playing the Switch.

The challenge is whether the company can continue to roll out attractive software to keep the sales momentum going. Analysts say rising computer chip prices may also prove a challenge.

Atul Goyal, an analyst at Jefferies, noted worries about weakening sales of the Switch 2 were overblown, as seen in its strong sales in December, a key shopping season for toys and games.

"We maintain that fears regarding memory cost hike are speculative and strategically manageable," he said in a recent report.

More games are planned for the Super Mario Brothers franchise, which celebrated its 40th anniversary last year, as well as a new Splatoon game, according to Nintendo.

Outside companies are also planning Switch 2 titles, including a "Biohazard" and "Final Fantasy" offerings.

Nintendo stocks, which climbed over the summer months then gradually declined to about the same level they were a year ago, jumped 1.8% Tuesday.

Yuri Kageyama is on Threads:https://www.threads.com/@yurikageyama

Japanese game maker Nintendo reports robust profits on hit Switch 2 console

TOKYO (AP) —Nintendoposted a 51% rise in profit for the first three quarters of the fiscal year as the Japanesevideo-game...

 

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