South Africa's DA leader won't seek re-election in April

JOHANNESBURG, Feb 4 (Reuters) - South Africa's Democratic ​Alliance leader John ‌Steenhuisen told a press conference ‌on Wednesday that he would not seek re-election as the party's ⁠leader ‌in April.

Steenhuisen has led the pro-business ‍DA since 2019 and is currently agriculture minister in ​President Cyril Ramaphosa's ‌cabinet.

"For the rest of this term of office, I will focus all of my time ⁠and energy ​as Minister ​of Agriculture on defeating the most devastating ‍foot ⁠and mouth disease outbreak our country has ⁠ever seen," he said.

(Reporting by ‌Sfundo Parakozov;Editing by ‌Alexander Winning)

South Africa's DA leader won't seek re-election in April

JOHANNESBURG, Feb 4 (Reuters) - South Africa's Democratic ​Alliance leader John ‌Steenhuisen told a press conference ...
Israeli strikes kill 18 in Gaza, patient crossings at Rafah halted, Palestinian officials say

By Nidal al-Mughrabi and Pesha Magid

Reuters A Palestinian patient lies inside an ambulance, accompanied by relatives, as they make their way back to their homes after being informed by officials that their travel scheduled for today through the Rafah border crossing was postponed, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, February 4, 2026. REUTERS/Mahmoud Issa A Palestinian patient, accompanied by relatives, make their way back to their homes after being informed by officials that their travel scheduled for today through the Rafah border crossing was postponed, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, February 4, 2026. REUTERS/Mahmoud Issa

Palestinian patients, accompanied by relatives, make their way back to their homes in Khan Younis

CAIRO/JERUSALEM, Feb 4 (Reuters) - Israeli tank shelling and airstrikes killed 18 people, including four children, in Gaza on Wednesday, and Israel halted the passage of patients through the Rafah ​border crossing, Palestinian officials said.

The Israeli military said tanks had fired on Gaza and airstrikes had been ‌launched after a gunman shot at Israeli soldiers and seriously injured a reservist.

The strikes targeted Gaza City and the southern city of Khan Younis. ‌A Gazan health official told Reuters that Israel had also halted the passage of patients through the Rafah border crossing to Egypt, two days after it had reopened, allowing a trickle of Palestinians to cross for the first time in months.

A spokesperson for the Red Crescent said patients had arrived at a hospital in Khan Younis in preparation for crossing Rafah for treatment, ⁠only to be informed that Israel had ‌postponed the evacuations.

"They called the patients and said today there is no travel at all, the crossing is closed," Raja'a Abu Teir, a Palestinian patient who was set to be evacuated, ‍told Reuters at the hospital, where several patients were waiting in ambulances.

The Israeli agency that controls access to Gaza, COGAT, said in a statement on Wednesday that Rafah crossing remained open, but they had not received the necessary coordination details from the World Health Organization ​to facilitate the crossing.

The WHO did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

REOPENING CROSSING PART OF TRUMP ‌PLAN

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Reopening the crossing was one of the requirements under the October ceasefire that set out the first phase of U.S. President Donald Trump's plan to stop fighting between Israel and Palestinian Hamas militants.

Sixteen patients from Gaza and 40 of their escorts crossed into Egypt on Tuesday, Gazan medics told Reuters.

A Hamas police source told Reuters that at least 40 people crossed from Egypt to Gaza late on Tuesday.

In January, Trump declared the start of the second phase of the ceasefire ⁠where the sides would negotiate the shattered enclave's future governance and ​reconstruction.

Key issues like the withdrawal of Israeli forces from the over 50% ​of Gaza they currently occupy and the disarmament of Hamas remain unresolved, while the fragile ceasefire has been marked by near-daily violence.

Since the start of the ceasefire, Israeli fire has killed at least ‍530 people, most of them ⁠civilians, according to Gaza health officials. Palestinian militants have killed four Israeli soldiers in the same period, according to Israeli authorities.

Israel's two-year offensive on the Gaza Strip killed more than 71,000 Palestinians, according to Gazan health ⁠authorities, displaced most of its population, and left much of the strip in ruins.

The October 7, 2023, Hamas attack that triggered the war killed ‌around 1,200 people in Israel, according to Israeli tallies.

(Reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi in Cairo. Additional reporting by ‌Tala Ramadan; Writing by Pesha Magid; Editing by Ros Russell)

Israeli strikes kill 18 in Gaza, patient crossings at Rafah halted, Palestinian officials say

By Nidal al-Mughrabi and Pesha Magid Palestinian patients, accompanied by relatives, make their way back to th...
Pakistan sends helicopters, drones to end desert standoff; 58 dead

By Saleem Ahmed and Asif Shahzad

QUETTA, Feb 4 (Reuters) - Pakistan's security forces used drones and helicopters to wrest control of a southwestern town from separatist insurgents after a three-day battle, police said on Wednesday, as the death toll in the weekend's ​violence rose to 58.

Saturday's wave of coordinated attacks by the separatist Baloch Liberation Army brought Pakistan's largest province to a near ‌standstill as security forces exchanged fire with insurgents in more than a dozen places, killing 197 militants.

"I thought the roof and walls of my house were going to blow up," ‌said Robina Ali, a housewife living near the main administrative building in the fortified provincial capital of Quetta, where a powerful morning blast rocked the area.

Fighters of the BLA, the region's strongest insurgent group, stormed schools, banks, markets and security installations across Balochistan in one of their largest operations ever, killing more than 22 security officials and 36 civilians.

Police officials gave details of the situation on condition of anonymity as they were not authorised to speak to ⁠the media.

In the desert town of Nushki, home ‌to about 50,000, the insurgents seized control of the police station and other security installations, triggering a three-day standoff.

Police said seven officers were killed in the fighting before they regained control of the town late on Monday, while ‍operations against the BLA continue elsewhere in the province.

"More troops were sent to Nushki," said one security official. "Helicopters and drones were used against the militants."

Pakistan's interior ministry did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

LATE NIGHT ATTACKS

Pakistan's largest and poorest province, mineral-rich Balochistan borders Iran and Afghanistan and is home to Beijing's investment ​in the Gwadar deepwater port and other projects.

It has grappled with a decades-long insurgency led by ethnic Baloch separatists seeking greater autonomy and ‌a larger share of its natural resources.

The BLA, which has urged people of the province to support the movement, said on Tuesday it had killed 280 soldiers during its Operation "Herof", Black Storm, but gave no evidence.

Security officials said the weekend attacks began at 4 a.m. on Saturday with suicide blasts in Nushki and the fishing port of Pasni and gun and grenade attacks in 11 more places, including Quetta.

The insurgents seized at least six district administration offices during the siege and had advanced at one point to within 1 km (3,300 ft) of the provincial chief minister's office in ⁠Quetta, the police officials said.

EVOLVING INSURGENCY

Pakistan has blamed India for the attacks, without furnishing ​evidence for charges that could escalate hostilities between the nuclear-powered neighbours who fought their ​worst armed conflict in decades in May.

India's foreign ministry has rejected the charges, saying Islamabad should instead tackle the "long-standing demands of its people in the region".

Retired Lt. General Amir Riaz, who led the military in Balochistan from 2015 to 2017, ‍said the insurgency had evolved over ⁠the last decade.

He added that it gained strength as the BLA received Indian support and used Afghanistan as a staging ground for its attacks, a charge the Taliban government has denied.

Riaz said the conflict would oscillate between stalemate and periods of heightened violence.

"It has ⁠escalated. The response will be decisive, leading to serious capacity degradation of BLA," he said, denying that the Pakistani military has used excessive force in Balochistan.

"However, ultimately the issues ‌are only resolved through political process and governance."

(Reporting by Saleem Ahmed in Quetta and Asif Shahzad in Islamabad; Additional reporting by ‌Ariba Shahid in Karachi; Writing by Saad Sayeed; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

Pakistan sends helicopters, drones to end desert standoff; 58 dead

By Saleem Ahmed and Asif Shahzad QUETTA, Feb 4 (Reuters) - Pakistan's security forces used drones and helico...
Greek rescuers search for potential missing people after deadly migrant boat collision

ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Greek coast guard patrol boats and a helicopter were searching for potential missing people off an eastern Aegean island Wednesday after an overnight collision between a patrol vessel and a speedboat carrying migrants that left at least 15 people dead.

Twenty-four migrants, including 11 children, were injured and were hospitalized on the island of Chios following the collision late Tuesday night. Two coast guard officers were also injured, with one remaining hospitalized Wednesday, the coast guard said.

The bodies of 11 men and three women were recovered from the sea shortly after the collision and one woman died later in a hospital, authorities said.

The number of people who had been on the speedboat was not clear. Four patrol boats, two helicopters and divers began the search overnight, which continued Wednesday morning with a helicopter and five patrol vessels.

Details of exactly what happened were unclear. According to a coast guard statement Wednesday, one of its patrol boats came across the speedboat late Tuesday night making its way towards Chios without its navigation lights on. The speedboat refused to stop despite sound and visual signals by the patrol boat crew and changed direction, colliding with the patrol boat and capsizing, the statement said.

Photos posted by the coast guard showed signs of abrasion on the patrol boat's right side. The coast guard's account could not be independently verified.

Michalis Giannakos, the head of Greece's public hospital workers' union, said Tuesday night that staff at the hospital in Chios were placed on alert overnight to handle the sudden influx of injured and dead. Speaking on Greece's Open TV channel, Giannakos said several of the injured required surgery.

Greece is a major entry point into the European Union for people fleeing conflict and poverty in the Middle East, Africa and Asia.Fatal accidents are common. Many undertake the short but often perilous crossing from the Turkish coast to nearby Greek islands in the eastern Aegean, often in overcrowded inflatable dinghies. Others use high-speed vessels piloted by smugglers who deposit them on the island and then return to Turkey. But increased patrols and allegations ofpushbacks— summary deportations without allowing for asylum applications — by Greek authorities have reduced crossing attempts.

Greece, along with several other European Union countries, has been tightening its regulations on migration. In December, the European Union wasoverhauling its migration system, including streamlining deportations and increasing detentions.

There has long been a fierce debate among EU members about migration. Since a surge in asylum-seekers and other migrants to Europe a decade ago, public debate on the issue has shifted and far-right parties have gained political power. EUmigration policies have hardened, and the number of asylum-seekers is down from record levels.

Greek rescuers search for potential missing people after deadly migrant boat collision

ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Greek coast guard patrol boats and a helicopter were searching for potential missing people off an ...
Philippines House panel finds bid to impeach Marcos lacks substance

MANILA, Feb 4 (Reuters) - The Philippine House justice committee on Wednesday said two impeachment complaints against President Ferdinand Marcos Jr, accusing him of corruption, ​violating the constitution and betraying public trust, were lacking in substance.

On a ‌third day of discussions about the complaints filed separately by a lawyer and activists, the committee overwhelmingly decided ‌both lacked merit. Marcos, who is midway through his term in office, had denied wrongdoing.

The House of Representatives is expected to convene for a plenary vote where it could either uphold the committee's findings or override them. The chamber is currently dominated by loyalists ⁠of the president.

Gerville Luistro, the ‌head of the justice committee, said they plan to finish the report and submit it to the plenary on Monday next week.

"We ‍intend to transmit right away to the plenary, but it depends on the plenary as to when the same will be tackled on the floor," Luistro told a press conference.

For Marcos ​to be impeached it must be supported by at least one-third of the ‌lower house. If that happens, he would be the second Philippine head of state to be impeached after Joseph Estrada, whose 2001 trial was aborted when some prosecutors walked out.

The complaints against Marcos included his decision to allow his predecessor Rodrigo Duterte to be arrested and taken to The Hague to face trial at the International Criminal Court over thousands ⁠of killings during his notorious "war on drugs".

Marcos, 68, ​was also accused of abusing his authority in ​spending public funds that led to a corruption scandal involving flood-control projects. His alleged drug use, which he has denied, also made him unfit to ‍run the country, ⁠according to one of the complaints.

If the lower house decides to impeach him, the Senate would be required to convene for trial, where its 24 members ⁠serve as jurors.

Five top officials have been impeached in the Philippines and only one of those, a ‌former chief justice, was convicted and removed from office.

(Reporting by Mikhail Flores; ‌Editing by Martin Petty and David Stanway)

Philippines House panel finds bid to impeach Marcos lacks substance

MANILA, Feb 4 (Reuters) - The Philippine House justice committee on Wednesday said two impeachment complaints against Pre...
Novo Nordisk sees 'painful' US price cuts for Wegovy as investment in the future

COPENHAGEN, Feb 4 (Reuters) - Novo Nordisk CEO Mike ​Doustdar said on ‌Wednesday that the price reductions ‌for its obesity drug Wegovy in the U.S. are "painful" for the company's financial ⁠results but ‌he hopes that they will be ‍an investment in the future as many more people ​will be able to ‌get access to the medicines as a result.

Doustdar was speaking with journalists after the company ⁠on Tuesday gave ​a far ​worse-than-expected outlook for 2026 and flagged a tough ‍weight-loss ⁠market battle ahead as prices come under pressure.

(Reporting ⁠by Maggie Fick and ‌Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen, editing by ‌Stine Jacobsen)

Novo Nordisk sees 'painful' US price cuts for Wegovy as investment in the future

COPENHAGEN, Feb 4 (Reuters) - Novo Nordisk CEO Mike ​Doustdar said on ‌Wednesday that the price reductions ‌for its obesi...
Assassin of Japan's former PM Abe appeals life sentence

TOKYO, Feb 4 (Reuters) - A Japanese man has appealed against his life sentence for fatally ​shooting former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, a district ‌court spokesperson said on Wednesday.

Reuters

Tetsuya Yamagami, 45, sent shockwaves through Japan ‌after he shot and killed its longest-serving prime minister with a homemade gun in July 2022, while Abe was delivering a campaign speech in the western ⁠city of Nara.

"An appeal ‌was filed," said the spokesperson. The Osaka High Court will review the appeal.

Yamagami, who ‍admitted to killing Abe, was handed a life term by the court last month, in line with prosecutors' demands, ​though his defence had sought no more than ‌20 years, citing family issues linked to the Unification Church.

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Media have quoted Yamagami as telling the court he held a grudge against the Unification Church after his mother's large donations to it caused financial hardship ⁠for the family.

He took out ​his anger on Abe after ​the former prime minister had sent a video message to an event organised by a ‍church affiliate, media ⁠added.

Founded in South Korea in 1954, the Unification Church is famed for its mass weddings and ⁠counts Japanese followers as a key source of income.

(Reporting by ‌Kiyoshi Takenaka and Kaori Kaneko; Editing by ‌Himani Sarkar and Clarence Fernandez)

Assassin of Japan's former PM Abe appeals life sentence

TOKYO, Feb 4 (Reuters) - A Japanese man has appealed against his life sentence for fatally ​shooting former Prime Ministe...

 

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