
-
England v India: Three key battles
-
Stocks drop, oil gains as Mideast unrest fuels inflation fears
-
Israel's Netanyahu says Iran will 'pay heavy price' after hospital hit
-
France steps closer to defining rape as lack of consent
-
SpaceX Starship explodes during routine test
-
Belgrade show plots path out of Balkan labyrinth of pain
-
Thailand's 'Yellow Shirts' return to streets demand PM quit
-
Stocks drop after Fed comments as Mideast fears lift crude
-
Govts scramble to evacuate citizens from Israel, Iran
-
'Moving Great Wall': China unleash towering teen basketball star
-
Nippon Steel closes US Steel acquisition under strict conditions
-
Fundraising shift at NY pride as Trump scares off corporate donors
-
Kenyan LGBTQ community vogues despite threat of repressive law
-
Thai PM apologises as crisis threatens to topple government
-
Iran strikes Israel as Trump weighs US involvement
-
Shortages hit Nigeria's drive towards natural gas-fuelled cars
-
S.Africa's iconic protea flower relocates as climate warms
-
Thai PM faces growing calls to quit following Cambodia phone row
-
Mutilation ban and microchips: EU lawmakers vote on cat and dog welfare
-
Czechs sign record nuclear deal but questions remain
-
Suaalii fit to face Lions but O'Connor left out by Wallabies for Fiji Test
-
Myanmar's Aung San Suu Kyi marks 80th birthday in junta jail
-
Homeland insecurity: Expelled Afghans seek swift return to Pakistan
-
Mushroom murder suspect fell sick from same meal: defence
-
New Zealand coroner raises alarm over 'perilous' collision sport
-
Syrians watch Iran-Israel crossfire as government stays silent
-
India start new era without Kohli and Rohit against England
-
Asian stocks drop after Fed warning, oil dips with Mideast in focus
-
Juventus thump Al Ain in Club World Cup after Trump visit
-
Williams boost for Crusaders ahead of Chiefs Super Rugby showdown
-
Trump weighs involvement as Israel launches fresh strikes on Iran
-
Nippon, US Steel complete partnership deal
-
Chile ups hake catch limits for small-scale fishermen
-
Taiwan pursues homegrown Chinese spies as Beijing's influence grows
-
Myanmar's Aung San Suu Kyi marks 80th in junta jail
-
Hurricane Erick strengthens as it barrels toward Mexico
-
Thai PM faces growing calls to quit in Cambodia phone row
-
Justice at stake as generative AI enters the courtroom
-
Donnarumma warns PSG 'hungry' for more success at Club World Cup
-
From Tehran to Toronto via Turkey: an Iranian's bid to flee war
-
Bolivia risks debt default without new funding: president to AFP
-
Spetz Announces Closing of Second Tranche of Previously Announced $10,000,000 Private Placement for a Total of $8.1 Million
-
Snowline Gold Further Builds Out Board and Management Team; Provides Conference Call Details for PEA Update on Valley Gold Deposit, Rogue Project
-
Simon Hall and Michelle De Biolley Join Caldwell, Strengthening Firm's Board & CEO and Financial Services Practices
-
DEA Judge Mulrooney Rules on Marijuana Growers Case, Exposing Systemic Bias Against Cannabis Research
-
Oxylabs' Company Group Acquires One of the Leading Scraping Companies - ScrapingBee
-
U.S. Customs Suspects Evasion of AD/CVD Duties on Oil Country Tubular Goods From China by Thai Exporter
-
Messi fit to face Porto: Inter Miami's Mascherano
-
Waymo looks to test its self-driving cars in New York
-
Lakers to be sold in record-breaking $10 billion deal: ESPN

Shanghai grannies knit love and pride into Olympic bouquets
When Olympic champions at the 2022 Beijing Winter Games are handed their customary bouquets on the medal stand, no one will be prouder than Shanghai pensioner Mou Guoying.
She and around 150 others -- mostly elderly women -- have spent the past three months painstakingly crocheting the wool-yarn roses that will become the centrepieces of the medallists' posies.
"I'm sure that when I see the athletes holding the bouquets, wearing the medals, and then taking them to their countries, I'll feel very proud in my heart and very happy," said the octogenarian.
The women have produced 4,400 roses -- meant to symbolise the blossoming careers of the successful athletes -- for more than 1,200 bunches of flowers.
A woollen version was chosen because, unlike a perishable real bouquet, it can serve as a lifelong keepsake.
The pensioners are part of a crafting club at an activity centre for women and children that has become known nationally for its members' skills.
Those skills are evident in the finished product, a long metal stem wrapped in green yarn sprouting leaves on the way up to exquisite, tightly clustered crimson rose petals.
Before the Olympics, the women spent much of their time making high quality sweaters, socks, scarfs, hats and even whole dresses for charitable associations, which were typically then donated to the needy to help them through China's chilly winter.
A range of government organisations and businesses also routinely commission the club to create various items as gifts.
- 'Made with love' -
To members like 68-year-old Huang Hongying, who grew up wearing clothing handmade by parents and grandparents, it's a labour of love.
"We knit with love, to inherit love, and spread love," Huang said. "We’re deeply and affectionately attached to knitting."
Their Olympic contribution -- a project brought to them by the Shanghai Women's Federation -- is easily the group's biggest and most important undertaking yet.
Their crafting style came about in China in the mid-19th century when practitioners in Shanghai, a global entrepot, fused Chinese and Western techniques.
There was a fair amount of trial and error, however, as the club worked to perfect the roses' vivid appearance, buying real flowers and peeling the petals off one by one to reveal nature's design secrets.
Each craftswoman uses a ball of yarn, two needles and more than 50 stitch types, taking several hours to make each rose.
"Tightness is the key," Huang explained.
Finished roses are sent off to be combined with other elements -- olive branches, laurel, hydrangeas, lilies and osmanthus -- created by other clubs around the country.
Around 35 hours of work goes into each full bouquet.
It's exacting labour, and most of the Shanghai grannies have bandages wrapped around their fingers to protect them.
Mou, who is either 80 or 81 -- her exact age is lost in the tumult of wartime Shanghai -- is happy to put up with any discomfort.
"It’s gratifying for someone my age to participate in this Olympic project. I'm very happy and feel quite lucky," she said, adeptly twirling and looping bright red yarn with her needles.
"The bouquets will represent our nation and be brought to countries around the world by athletes," she added.
"So I knitted very, very meticulously."
O.Norris--AMWN