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Swiss News

Schneechaos gebannt: Flughafen Frankfurt nimmt Betrieb wieder auf

Blick.ch - Tue, 02/03/2026 - 15:54
Schneefall legt Flughafen Frankfurt lahm: Seit 15 Uhr sind Starts und Landungen auf Deutschlands grösstem Airport wegen geschlossener Schneedecke ausgesetzt.
Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

Verletzungen wurden zu viel: Ehemaliger FCZ-Meisterspieler beendet seine Karriere mit 32

Blick.ch - Tue, 02/03/2026 - 15:53
Verletzungen zwingen Salim Khelifi zum Rücktritt. 2022 wurde der frühere Lausanne-Junior mit dem FC Zürich Schweizer Meister.
Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

Mindestbestellwert wurde ihm zum Verhängnis: Rentner muss wegen Temu-Bestellung bis vors Kantonsgericht

Blick.ch - Tue, 02/03/2026 - 15:44
Ein Rentner wollte sich auf Temu Regenschirme bestellen. Nur ein kleiner Betrag fehlte zum Mindestbestellwert und Gratisversand. Er wählte deshalb angezeigte Steinschleudern aus. Doch diese sind in der Schweiz verboten. Nun liegt der Fall beim Kantonsgericht.
Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

Kochen kann doch jeder?: 7 Lebensmittel, die wir falsch zubereiten

Blick.ch - Tue, 02/03/2026 - 15:40
Bei der Verwendung bestimmter Lebensmittel werden oft Fehler gemacht, ohne dass es einem bewusst ist. Dies betrifft – überraschenderweise – auch Nahrungsmittel aus dem täglichen Gebrauch. Wer sich bewusst ernähren möchte, sollte diese Fehler vermeiden.
Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

Medienchefin Stapo Zürich: «Er machte antisemitische Aussagen vor der Polizei»

Blick.ch - Tue, 02/03/2026 - 15:34
Am Montagabend wurde ein 16-jähriger jüdischer Jugendlicher in Zürich Opfer eines Angriffs. Der mutmassliche Täter machte antisemitische Bemerkungen und wurde von Passanten festgehalten. Die Polizei ermittelt, der Mann ist in Haft.
Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

Ex-Wirtschaftsminister unter Druck: Politbeben in Grossbritannien wegen Epstein-Akten

Blick.ch - Tue, 02/03/2026 - 15:31
Geleakte E-Mails belasten den britischen Ex-Wirtschaftsminister Peter Mandelson. Während der Finanzkrise 2008 soll er geheime Infos an Jeffrey Epstein weitergegeben haben. Premierminister Keir Starmer nennt dies «skandalös».
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

Über 1500 Jahre vergessen: Das ist die Geschichte der Olympischen Spiele

Blick.ch - Tue, 02/03/2026 - 15:30
Am 6. Februar starten die Olympischen Spiele. Dieses Mal findet das Sportereignis in Mailand und Cortina d’Ampezzo statt. Bereits 776 vor Christus fanden solche Spiele statt. Wie sich der Wettbewerb der Antike bis zur heutigen Zeit entwickelt hat, erfährst du im Video.
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

Mehr weisse Akzente als letztes Jahr: Williams verpasst seinem 2026-Boliden leicht neuen Anstrich

Blick.ch - Tue, 02/03/2026 - 15:25
Am Dienstag hat Williams seinen neuen «FW48» vorgestellt. Neben Dunkelblau hat es auch weisse und hellblaue Details eingebaut.
Categories: Africa, Swiss News

Debate: Estonia: no roads across the Baltic ice

Eurotopics.net - Tue, 02/03/2026 - 12:33
For the first time since 2019, the freezing temperatures mean that motor vehicles could travel across the ice from Estonia's mainland to its islands. However, the authorities are refusing to set up ice roads on the grounds that they are too expensive, too risky, and that no money has been allocated to such roads in the budget. Locals are now driving across the ice at their own risk in some places.
Categories: European Union, Swiss News

Pourquoi le Ghana suspend le processus d'obtention de la citoyenneté pour les personnes d'origine africaine

BBC Afrique - Tue, 02/03/2026 - 12:11
Depuis 2016, les personnes pouvant prouver que leurs ancêtres sont originaires d'Afrique peuvent obtenir la nationalité ghanéenne.
Categories: Afrique, Swiss News

The 2028-2034 multiannual financial framework

Written by Tim Peters.

The European Parliament is fully committed to ensuring an ambitious EU long-term budget that meets the Union’s many challenges in the years to come. Therefore, Parliament’s two co-rapporteurs on the MFF, Siegfried Mureşan (EPP, Romania) and Carla Tavares (S&D, Portugal), insist on a significantly higher volume for the 2028-2034 multiannual financial framework (MFF) than proposed by the European Commission. In their draft interim report, Parliament’s two co-rapporteurs propose an overall size of 1.38 % of EU gross national income (GNI), 1.27 % of EU GNI for the MFF as such and 0.11 % of EU GNI for the repayment of debt created by Next Generation EU (NGEU). The MFF constitutes the EU’s long-term budgetary plan, setting a maximum level of spending (‘ceilings’) for each major category of expenditure (‘heading’) in accordance with Article 312 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU).

In their draft, the two co-rapporteurs propose to Parliament to continue its opposition against ‘the merging of different policies in one plan per Member State’. They welcome the substantial increase in financial resources proposed for greater investment in research, strategic autonomy, the clean transition, defence, technological sovereignty and economic resilience. However, they stress that the consolidation of programmes in the Competitiveness Fund reduces transparency and limits Parliament’s ability to ensure appropriate funding for specific policy objectives. The co-rapporteurs oppose the Commission approach on additional flexibility, which in their eyes sacrifices transparency and controls under the guise of efficiency, compromising programme quality and democratic accountability, and undermining Parliament’s role as the budgetary and discharge authority.

The European Commission presented its proposals for the 2028-2034 (MFF) on 16 July 2025 and 3 September 2025. The Commission proposed a budget amounting to a total of almost €1.8 trillion in commitments over seven years (in constant 2025 prices). The 2028-2034 budget proposed by the Commission corresponds to 1.26 % of the EU’s gross national income (GNI) including 0.11 % of EU GNI for the repayment of the debt created by NGEU grants. Excluding the NGEU repayment, the proposed post-2027 MFF would reflect, in nominal terms, an increase of €367.2 billion (+29 %). However, in real terms, the increase would only be 0.02 percentage points of GNI.

Academia, think-tanks, other EU institutions and bodies, and a variety of stakeholders are publishing a wealth of analysis and commentary on the proposed 2028-2034 MFF as it proceeds through negotiations (see our monthly digest).

OVERVIEW OF EPRS PUBLICATIONS ON THE 2028-2034 MFF PACKAGE: LEGISLATION IN PROGRESS BRIEFINGS: INITIAL APPRAISALS OF COMMISSION IMPACT ASSESSMENTS: FURTHER READING:

Categories: European Union, Swiss News

Union européenne : les Balkans et l'hypothèse d'une adhésion immédiate et au rabais pour l'Ukraine

Courrier des Balkans / Serbie - Tue, 02/03/2026 - 11:37

L'hypothèse d'une adhésion de l'Ukraine à l'Union européenne dès janvier 2027 s'invite dans les négociations de paix — au risque de bouleverser en profondeur les règles de l'élargissement européen, notamment pour les Balkans.

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Union européenne : les Balkans et l'hypothèse d'une adhésion immédiate et au rabais pour l'Ukraine

Courrier des Balkans / Monténégro - Tue, 02/03/2026 - 11:37

L'hypothèse d'une adhésion de l'Ukraine à l'Union européenne dès janvier 2027 s'invite dans les négociations de paix — au risque de bouleverser en profondeur les règles de l'élargissement européen, notamment pour les Balkans.

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Union européenne : les Balkans et l'hypothèse d'une adhésion immédiate et au rabais pour l'Ukraine

Courrier des Balkans / Macédoine - Tue, 02/03/2026 - 11:37

L'hypothèse d'une adhésion de l'Ukraine à l'Union européenne dès janvier 2027 s'invite dans les négociations de paix — au risque de bouleverser en profondeur les règles de l'élargissement européen, notamment pour les Balkans.

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Union européenne : les Balkans et l'hypothèse d'une adhésion immédiate et au rabais pour l'Ukraine

Courrier des Balkans / Bosnie-Herzégovine - Tue, 02/03/2026 - 11:37

L'hypothèse d'une adhésion de l'Ukraine à l'Union européenne dès janvier 2027 s'invite dans les négociations de paix — au risque de bouleverser en profondeur les règles de l'élargissement européen, notamment pour les Balkans.

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Union européenne : les Balkans et l'hypothèse d'une adhésion immédiate et au rabais pour l'Ukraine

Courrier des Balkans / Albanie - Tue, 02/03/2026 - 11:37

L'hypothèse d'une adhésion de l'Ukraine à l'Union européenne dès janvier 2027 s'invite dans les négociations de paix — au risque de bouleverser en profondeur les règles de l'élargissement européen, notamment pour les Balkans.

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EU action on cancer – State of play

Written by Laurence Amand-Eeckhout

Background

As defined by the World Health Organization (WHO), cancer is a generic term for a large group of diseases that can affect any part of the body. One defining feature of cancer is the rapid creation of abnormal cells that grow beyond their usual boundaries, which can then invade adjoining parts of the body and spread to other organs (metastasis). Cancer arises from the transformation of normal cells into tumour cells in a multistage process that generally progresses from a pre-cancerous lesion to a malignant tumour.

According to the WHO’s International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), at least 40 % of all cancer cases could be prevented with effective primary prevention measures, meaning that around four in 10 cancers are potentially avoidable by reducing exposure to established modifiable risk factors. The main risk factors for cancer include tobacco use, alcohol consumption, unhealthy diet, obesity, physical inactivity, hormonal factors, environmental and occupational exposures, ultraviolet radiation, and infections such as those caused by hepatitis B and C viruses and some types of human papillomavirus. The burden of cancer can also be reduced through early detection and timely access to appropriate treatment.

World Cancer Day takes place every year on 4 February. It was established on 4 February 2000 at the initiative of the Union for International Cancer Control. The three-year ‘United by unique‘ campaign (2025-2027) aims to raise awareness of the importance of people-centred care.

Facts and figures

According to estimates from the IARC, about one in five people worldwide will develop cancer at some point during their lifetime.

There are no official EU statistics for the total number of people currently living with cancer in the EU. Available Eurostat data focus on deaths from cancer, cancer healthcare and equipment for treatment.

Cancer is currently the second leading cause of mortality in the EU, after cardiovascular diseases (Eurostat). In 2024, around 2.7 million people were diagnosed with cancer in the EU and around 1.27 million died (data published in December 2025 by ECIS, the European Cancer Information System). Compared with 2022, this represents a slight decrease of 1.7 % in new cases and 1.9 % in deaths. Nevertheless, these estimates illustrate the substantial burden of cancer, and projections indicate that these figures are expected to rise further: owing to an ageing population, unhealthy lifestyles, and unequal access to screening and care, by 2040, cancer diagnoses are expected to increase by 19 %, and cancer deaths by 27 %, which would make cancer the leading cause of death in the EU.

According to the EU Country Cancer Profiles Synthesis Report 2025, published jointly by the European Commission and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), between 2023 and 2050 cancer is expected to reduce population life expectancy by 1.9 years on average in the EU compared with a scenario without cancer.

The four most common cancer causes of death for both men and women in the EU are estimated to be lung cancer (19.7 % of all cancer deaths), followed by colorectal (12.2 %), pancreatic (7.5 %) and breast cancer (7.3 %). Among men, the main diagnoses are prostate cancer, followed by lung and colorectal cancer. Among women, the main diagnosis is breast cancer.

As highlighted in the 2024 joint European Commission/OECD report on cancer inequalities, significant inequalities persist across the EU in exposure to risk factors, particularly affecting those with lower levels of education, who show higher rates of smoking, obesity and harmful alcohol consumption, resulting in higher cancer incidence and mortality. In addition, substantial gender-based differences exist in exposure to cancer risk factors, to the detriment of men, particularly with regard to tobacco use, alcohol consumption, unhealthy diets and overweight.

In 2021, the Commission estimated the overall economic impact of cancer to exceed €100 billion annually. In a 2025 report, the OECD estimates that in the EU-27+2 (Iceland and Norway), workforce productivity is reduced by €50 billion each year, with cancer projected to cost €97 billion annually between 2024 and 2050.

EU action

Since the mid-1980s, the EU has worked alongside Member States to combat cancer. Under Article 168 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, the EU complements and adds value to national public health actions. EU efforts focus on prevention, research and information (e.g. awareness campaigns), while fostering cooperation between Member States. The EU also adopts legislation tackling cancer risk factors, such as exposure to environmental pollution or hazardous substances and radiation, obesityalcohol-related harm, tobacco consumption and smoke- and aerosol-free environments. In 2023, the revised Consumer Credit Directive (Directive (EU) 2023/2225) strengthened consumer protection in credit agreement, particularly for cancer survivors (‘right to be forgotten’).

In February 2021, as part of the European health union, the European Commission adopted the Europe’s Beating Cancer plan to address cancer-related inequalities and help improve prevention, treatment and care. A total of €4 billion has been allocated to the plan, drawn from various programmes. The plan is structured around four key action areas (prevention; early detection; diagnosis and treatment; and quality of life for cancer patients, survivors and carers) and supported by 10 flagship initiatives, under implementation. In February 2025, the Commission published a review of the plan from its launch until the end of 2024. It highlights that implementation is well underway (more than 90 % of actions have either been concluded or are ongoing), that the plan is a successful example of a health-in-all-policies-based approach, and that governance of the plan has proved to be efficient so far, with several groups providing expertise (comprising stakeholder representatives, Member State experts and Commission services). However, delays and gaps persist, notably concerning financial and institutional barriers.

The EU has invested continuously in cancer research through successive framework programmes for research and innovation. Under Horizon Europe (2021-2027), the Cancer Mission ensures that new research and innovation developments are effectively translated into concrete solutions to improve cancer control.

European Parliament

In June 2020, the European Parliament set up a Special Committee on Beating Cancer (BECA), which ended its mandate in December 2021. The committee’s final report was adopted by Parliament in February 2022. Its recommendations focus on cancer prevention, equal access to cancer care across borders, and a European approach addressing medicine shortages.

In its resolution of 13 December 2023 on non-communicable diseases (NCDs), Parliament pointed out that many people living with NCDs (including cancer) are undiagnosed and unaware of their illness, and thus fail to get proper, timely treatment. It invited the Commission to collect examples of best practices regarding screening for and early detection of NCDs. Parliament also stressed the importance of ensuring the collection of comparable, high-quality data on NCDs at EU level.

Since the start of the current legislature, MEPs have submitted a range of written questions to the Commission concerning cancer-related issues. In 2025, these included questions on the funding of the Europe’s Beating Cancer plan (E‑004037/2025) and its inclusion in the next multiannual financial framework (E-004760/2025); the protection of cancer survivors from discrimination (E-001252/2025); the harmful effects of sunbeds (E-001259/2025); measures to reduce cancer risk in children and young people (E-002125/2025 ); and the assessment of the effectiveness of innovative cancer therapies (E-001448/2025).

The Committee on Public Health (SANT) monitors the implementation of the Europe’s Beating Cancer plan. It is preparing an own-initiative report to assess the plan’s implementation, supported by an EPRS study (European implementation assessment) published in October 2025. The study, which assesses the implementation of the plan across EU Member States between 2021 and 2024, focuses on three core areas: gaps and delays in implementation, particularly in prevention, cancer care and quality of life; the plan’s impact on cancer inequalities across the EU; and lessons learned and their relevance for future EU initiatives on NCDs. It also proposes actions to improve cancer prevention and control in the EU.

Read this ‘at a glance’ note on ‘EU action on cancer – State of play‘ in the Think Tank pages of the European Parliament.

Categories: European Union, Swiss News

Serbie : des proches de Vučić pris la main dans le pot de cannabis

Courrier des Balkans / Serbie - Tue, 02/03/2026 - 07:32

Cinq tonnes de marijuana empaquetées dans des centaines de boîtes en carton : voici ce que la police a trouvé dans l'entrepot de la société Florakom, près de Kruševac... Celle-ci appartient à un cadre du SNS au pouvoir, très proche du ministre de la Défense, Bratislav Gašić.

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