Rafah Crossing Reopens — But Only a Trickle Gets Out
After a two‑day closure, Gaza’s Rafah crossing reopened Sunday, allowing only a limited number of Palestinians to travel between Gaza and Egypt. Egyptian state media reported movement in both directions, but UN data shows that in the first four days of reopening, just 36 medical evacuees and 62 companions were allowed out — a fraction of those waiting.
Why it matters: The crossing is a core requirement of the U.S.-backed ceasefire, yet confusion, delays, and inconsistent access are undermining humanitarian relief.
Quick Hits
- Netanyahu heads to Washington — with Iran expected to dominate discussions. [Source]
- France’s Jack Lang becomes the highest‑profile Epstein‑linked figure in France — after DOJ file releases. [Source]
- UK political fallout deepens — as Starmer faces pressure to explain Mandelson’s appointment. [Source]
What to Watch Today
By The Numbers
Bottom Line
The world wakes up to a reopened Gaza crossing under chaos, a political earthquake in the UK, a French cultural icon felled by Epstein‑linked investigations, and Ukraine bracing for deadly cold with almost no power. Meanwhile, Reform UK’s Welsh leader is already crying foul ahead of elections.