Transport Won't be Ready, Paris Mayor Says Ahead of 2024 Olympics

This photograph taken in Paris on November 22, 2023 shows the sunset over the ferris wheel installed at the Tuileries Garden, with the Dome des Invalides seen in the background. (Photo by Stefano RELLANDINI / AFP)
This photograph taken in Paris on November 22, 2023 shows the sunset over the ferris wheel installed at the Tuileries Garden, with the Dome des Invalides seen in the background. (Photo by Stefano RELLANDINI / AFP)
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Transport Won't be Ready, Paris Mayor Says Ahead of 2024 Olympics

This photograph taken in Paris on November 22, 2023 shows the sunset over the ferris wheel installed at the Tuileries Garden, with the Dome des Invalides seen in the background. (Photo by Stefano RELLANDINI / AFP)
This photograph taken in Paris on November 22, 2023 shows the sunset over the ferris wheel installed at the Tuileries Garden, with the Dome des Invalides seen in the background. (Photo by Stefano RELLANDINI / AFP)

Paris will not be ready for the Olympics and Paralympics in terms of transport and sheltering the homeless, city mayor Anne Hidalgo has said.
"There will be places where (public) transport will not be ready because there will not be enough trains and not frequently enough," Hidalgo told news show Quotidien in thinly veiled criticism of Paris region president Valerie Pecresse.
The Ile de France (Paris region) Regional Council, led by right-winger Pecresse, is in charge of transports in the region.
Hidalgo said the government was also, "a little bit" responsible for the situation, adding: "But we do this all together so I'm also concerned".
Socialist Hidalgo said the RER (regional express train) station at Porte Maillot in western Paris would not be ready for the July 26-Aug 11 Games, Reuters reported.
However, Pecresse wrote on social media platform X, formerly Twitter: "We will be ready. It's a huge collective effort that shouldn't be denigrated by an absent mayor".
Hidalgo added that the situation of the homeless in the capital was another major issue.
"I don't want to take them out and hide them (during the Olympics). There should be a social legacy," Hidalgo said.
"We want to set up housing where they could be as soon as this winter and we're dealing with it with the regional authorities and the state and we all agree that we have to move forward - but we are not ready."



Dakar Rally 2025: Stage 3 Begins in Bisha, Saudi Arabia

US driver Mitch Guthrie Jr steers his car assisted by co-driver Kellon Walch during stage 2B of the 47th Dakar Rally between Bisha and Bisha, in Saudi Arabia, on January 6, 2025. (AFP)
US driver Mitch Guthrie Jr steers his car assisted by co-driver Kellon Walch during stage 2B of the 47th Dakar Rally between Bisha and Bisha, in Saudi Arabia, on January 6, 2025. (AFP)
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Dakar Rally 2025: Stage 3 Begins in Bisha, Saudi Arabia

US driver Mitch Guthrie Jr steers his car assisted by co-driver Kellon Walch during stage 2B of the 47th Dakar Rally between Bisha and Bisha, in Saudi Arabia, on January 6, 2025. (AFP)
US driver Mitch Guthrie Jr steers his car assisted by co-driver Kellon Walch during stage 2B of the 47th Dakar Rally between Bisha and Bisha, in Saudi Arabia, on January 6, 2025. (AFP)

The third stage of the Dakar Rally 2025, which is being held in Saudi Arabia for the sixth consecutive year, started Tuesday and will continue until January 17. Competitors began the stage in Bisha Governorate and will finish in Al Hanakiyah, covering a total distance of 894 km, including a timed special stage of 327 km, the Saudi Press Agency said on Wednesday.
The fourth stage of the event will start today from Al Hanakiyah and conclude in AlUla Governorate, covering a total distance of 588 km, including a timed special stage of 415 km.
Drivers will face significant challenges in this stage as they will not be able to rely on mechanical support teams.