
-
Renowned Holocaust survivor Margot Friedlaender dies at 103
-
Woods, 16-year-old Charlie, misses out in US Open qualifier
-
Pakistan says India has put neighbours 'closer to major conflict'
-
On patrol for jihadists with Mauritania's camel cavalry
-
France, Poland sign treaty with mutual defence pledge
-
NATO chief seeks defence spending at 5% of GDP by 2032: Dutch PM
-
La Rochelle head coach O'Gara suspended for five weeks
-
Measles roars back in the US, topping 1,000 cases
-
Fulham boss Silva refuses to rule out Saudi switch
-
From Chicago to Chiclayo: Peruvian town hails adoptive son and pope
-
Ivorian women fight FGM with reconstructive surgery
-
Pedersen wins opening stage of Giro d'Italia in Albania
-
Stocks mixed despite hopes for US-China tariff talks
-
US, Swiss agree to speed up tariff talks
-
Trump floats cutting China tariffs to 80% ahead of trade talks
-
Pedersen wins opening stage of Giro d'Italia
-
Marc Marquez sets Le Mans lap record in French MotoGP practice
-
Jungle music: Chimp drumming reveals building blocks of human rhythm
-
Guardiola tells Man City stars to question their hunger after troubled season
-
Putin, Xi, Steven Seagal and missiles: Russia's Red Square parade
-
Trump suggests lower 80% China tariff ahead of Geneva trade talks
-
Arteta wants Arsenal to use Liverpool guard of honour as title fuel
-
Stocks lifted by hopes for US-China talks
-
Putin hails troops in Ukraine as allies attend WWII parade
-
UK, northern European nations support Ukraine 30-day ceasefire: Norway PM
-
Activists hold 'die-in' protest at Soviet monument in Warsaw
-
Trump suggests lower China tariff, says 80% 'seems right!'
-
Alonso confirms exit from Leverkusen at end of season
-
Maresca ready for Chelsea's 'huge' Newcastle test
-
Alcaraz, Sabalenka cruise to wins at the Italian Open
-
Swiss seize window of opportunity on Trump tariffs
-
Amorim admits Man Utd 'problems' despite reaching Europa League final
-
New Pope Leo XIV has mixed record on abuse: campaigners
-
Xabi Alonso confirms exit from Bayer Leverkusen at season's end
-
From blockades to ballots: Serbian students confront government
-
Kyiv's EU allies endorse tribunal to try Russian leaders
-
Two men found guilty of chopping down iconic UK tree
-
Tennis, Twitter and marinated fish: Things to know about Pope Leo
-
Liverpool's Salah voted Football Writers' Player of the Year
-
Pakistan says India has brought neighbours 'closer to major conflict'
-
Stocks lifted by hopes for US-China talks after UK deal
-
Putin hails troops fighting in Ukraine as foreign leaders attend parade
-
Howe urges Newcastle to fulfil Champions League expectation
-
Weary border residents in Indian Kashmir struggle to survive
-
Leo XIV says Church must fight 'lack of faith' in first mass as pope
-
Liverpool boss Slot fears replacing Alexander-Arnold will be a tough task
-
British Airways owner unveils big Boeing, Airbus order
-
IPL suspended for one week over India-Pakistan conflict
-
Slot says all at Liverpool sad to see Alexander-Arnold go
-
Leo XIV celebrates first mass as pope in Sistine Chapel

Beijing Olympics mixed team events showcase greater gender balance
The Beijing Olympics are the most gender-balanced Winter Games ever, with competitors saying the expansion of mixed team events "means a lot" and helps drive up standards in women's sport.
More than half of all events at the Beijing Games feature women, thanks to the addition of two more women's events and four new mixed team ones -- in ski jumping, aerials, snowboard cross and short track speed skating.
Marion Thenault, who competed for Canada in the freestyle skiing mixed aerials event on Thursday, told AFP that it was "really great" to have athletes of different genders competing against each other.
"It means that your team has to be strong on the men's side and the women's side, and it just pushes the sport for both genders," she said after helping her team win the inaugural bronze medal.
"I think that's really good because it's a male-dominated sport but here tonight we showed we have strong teams with great females in them."
Competitor Ashley Caldwell, part of the winning US team, said there was "always room to develop" when it comes to representation in sport but hoped the event could "showcase" women athletes.
"I've always pushed myself to do harder tricks to show the world that women can do it," she said.
"To have more women in sport at a high level is great for the world -- empowering people around the world to respect women and to be in sport."
- Record number of women -
The two new women's events which have been added to the Beijing Olympics programme are monobob in bobsleigh and Big Air, which was won by California-born Chinese freestyle skiing star Eileen Gu.
Women account for a record 45 percent of athletes at the Beijing Games, up from 41 percent in Pyeongchang four years ago.
Three countries -- Ecuador, Kosovo and Malaysia -- have a female athlete at the Winter Olympics for the first time.
International Olympic Committee sports director Kit McConnell said greater female representation "is not just a statistic".
"We have record levels of female participation, record numbers of female athletes, record numbers of both female and mixed events at these Games," he said.
"Every female athlete that's here has a ripple effect" in terms of investment, he added.
For the first time at a Winter Games, there is also an openly non-binary Olympian -- pairs figure skater Timothy LeDuc.
"Ashley (Cain-Gribble, their skating partner) and I represent an alternative in pairs skating, a different narrative," LeDuc, who uses the pronouns they/their but whose gender is classed as male on their athlete page, said.
- 'Women's level being pushed' -
The mixed team events do not always feature an equal number of men and women.
The mixed team aerials event, in which the United States edged out China to win gold after a hard-fought contest at Genting Snow Park, featured six teams of three.
The rules stipulated that each team must have at least one male and one female athlete competing -- but in practice, all six competing teams selected two male and one female.
Switzerland's Alexandra Baer said it was "understandable because people want to push for the podium".
"That's just a bit easier if you have two men doing three flips and five twists instead of another girl," she said.
"We're at the moment where the women's level is being pushed, and if that keeps going I think we can also have teams with two women and one guy. I think that's possible."
American Caldwell also believes things are moving in the right direction.
"The US is incredible because we have so much access for women's sport and that's been a benefit to me," she said.
"To increase that around the world is incredible and I hope this showcases that."
P.Martin--AMWN