
-
Mbappe moves closer to recouping 55mn euros from PSG
-
OpenAI countersues Musk as feud deepens
-
Global plastic recycling rates 'stagnant' at under 10%: study
-
Mumbai attacks suspect extradited from US lands in India
-
Scheffler launches quest for Masters repeat
-
Nicklaus, Player and Watson pick McIlroy to win Masters
-
Lebanon's civil war fighters working for reconciliation, 50 years on
-
Miuccia Prada's path from activist to top designer
-
Pope in surprise St Peter's visit a day after meeting King Charles
-
Forest will ignore top five cushion: Nuno
-
Wall Street rally fizzles as tariff worries resurface
-
Cantona claims Ratcliffe is destroying Man Utd
-
FIA deputy president resigns, attacks Ben Sulayem
-
Russia, US swap prisoners in push for closer ties
-
Alcaraz eases into Monte Carlo quarter-finals, Draper out
-
Italy's Prada agrees to buy rival Versace for 1.25 bn euros
-
Five things to know about Versace
-
US consumer inflation cools in March on falling gas prices
-
Liam Lawson on 'crazy' season after Red Bull sacking
-
Cannes Festival: Films in competition
-
Cartier exhibition to bedazzle London crowds
-
Former France star Chabal says he has 'no memories' of rugby career
-
Shanghai finance workers worry after front-row seat to tariff turmoil
-
Death toll in Dominican nightclub disaster rises to 218
-
Charles and Camilla visit tomb of Dante, Italy's greatest poet
-
Draper dumped out of Monte Carlo Masters by Davidovich Fokina
-
Scheffler, McIlroy seek fast start as 89th Masters tees off
-
EU halts counter-tariffs but no pause in US-China trade war
-
Australian schoolboy Gout Gout runs sub-10 second 100m --- twice
-
Scarlett Johansson to star at Cannes as festival unveils line-up
-
Stock markets soar as Trump delays painful tariffs
-
Trump tariffs weigh on Germany as institutes cut forecasts
-
US and Russia exchange prisoners
-
Japan top yakuza group promises 'no more trouble'
-
Champion Martin eyes Qatar return as 'bitter' Marc Marquez seeks redemption
-
The US citizens still held in Russian prisons
-
US-Russian ballet dancer Ksenia Karelina freed by Moscow: Rubio
-
Not just penguins on Antarctic islands hit by Trump tariffs
-
Canada PM says Trump's pause on tariffs a 'welcome reprieve'
-
Witkoff and Araghchi: the men leading US-Iran nuclear talks
-
Stocks zoom higher as Trump delays painful tariffs
-
China urges US to meet 'halfway' as markets rocket on Trump tariff pause
-
Vatican releases image of Charles, Camilla meeting pope
-
Waratahs' McKellar rules out becoming next Wallabies coach
-
Taiwan's TSMC says first quarter revenue up 42 percent
-
Rybakina leads Kazakhstan to BJK Cup victory over Australia
-
Vietnam says it will start trade talks with United States
-
Expo 2025 in Japan: five things to know
-
Japan's World Expo touts unity, and algae, in turbulent times
-
Trump's tariff pause gives market relief, but China trade war intensifies
RIO | -1.13% | 54.99 | $ | |
SCS | -2.61% | 10.34 | $ | |
CMSC | -0.89% | 22.4 | $ | |
RYCEF | -0.99% | 9.11 | $ | |
NGG | 0.16% | 65.315 | $ | |
BCE | -0.89% | 20.815 | $ | |
CMSD | -1.35% | 22.446 | $ | |
RBGPF | -12.83% | 60.27 | $ | |
VOD | -1.48% | 8.455 | $ | |
GSK | -3.03% | 33.465 | $ | |
AZN | -2.91% | 64.87 | $ | |
BP | -4.2% | 26.775 | $ | |
JRI | -1.78% | 11.78 | $ | |
BCC | -3.95% | 94.7 | $ | |
RELX | 0.02% | 48.55 | $ | |
BTI | -0.3% | 40.09 | $ |

Kyiv City Ballet become exiles overnight in Paris
Kyiv City Ballet is used to being away from home, often touring for nine months of the year.
But having arrived in France just a day before war broke out back home, its dancers suddenly became exiles overnight.
Paris authorities have given them refuge with a residency at the city's Chatelet Theatre.
The team tries to put on a brave face, though their eyes are often reddened with emotion.
The most wrenching aspect is that the company has been cut in two, one half having remained in Kyiv while some 30 dancers came to France for a children's version of "The Nutcracker".
"The others will try to join us," said Ekaterina Kozlova, deputy director of the troupe that she founded in 2012 with her husband.
"We feel that now it is especially important for us to share the beauty of ballet. We tell our dancers before going on stage that they have a unique opportunity to share their voice," she added.
- 'Stressed, drained' -
In a unique evening at the Chatelet this week, the troupe performed and led a dance class alongside their colleagues from the Paris Opera to raise money for the Red Cross.
They received a long ovation, especially when they changed into T-shirts in the blue-and-yellow colours of the Ukrainian flag for a rendition of the traditional folk piece "Men from Kyiv".
There was also a moment of high emotion when they sang the national anthem in front of a projection of the flag.
But behind the scenes, it was harder to stay positive.
"It's very difficult. Several times a day, someone starts crying because they have received bad news or scary news or no news," Kozlova said.
"We have a young mother who has her daughter in Ukraine. Everyone is stressed, emotionally drained."
Everything had started so well, with the company excited to be back on the road after the Covid-19 pandemic.
"We arrived in Paris on February 23 and we were so happy, we love being in Paris. We were planning on being here a few weeks then going back home," said Kozlova.
But the very next day, they awoke to an avalanche of text messages and missed calls from family and friends.
"Since then, we've all been in a state of shock," she said.
- Worry -
For dancer Vladyslav Dobshynskyi, 23, it is hard to tear his mind away.
Dancing can offer momentary distraction, he said, "But it's not possible to forget. Even when you're on stage, you worry about your loved ones."
Olga Posternak, 34, performed a pas-de-deux from Swan Lake with Paris Opera principal dancer Paul Marque.
But her mind is always on her husband and brother back home, safe for now somewhere near Lviv in western Ukraine.
"We call our families day and night," she said.
Kozlova said they were determined to keep touring around Europe and the world, and have already lined up appearances in the French cities of Nantes and Tours.
She said she was "overwhelmed" by the generosity of France, which has included offers of housing from individuals and organisations, and dance shops who have provided them with pointe shoes and leotards.
And above all, they rely on each other.
"In Ukraine, we say that where we have family, we are at home. And in this troupe, we feel like a big family".
O.Ortiz--AT