- Pakistan reopens Punjab schools after smog improves
- All Black fly-half Plummer to join French side Clermont
- Stock markets retreat ahead of Nvidia earnings
- Ford to cut 4,000 jobs in Europe
- As Trump returns, China seizes chance for climate mantle
- Spurs appeal against length of Bentancur ban for Son slur
- French comedian faces victims of drug-fuelled car crash
- Focus purely on Springboks, not future, insists under-fire Wales coach Gatland
- Ukraine criticises Western allies for embassy closures
- One Direction stars attend Liam Payne's funeral in UK
- French farmers lift border blockade after talks with PM
- US envoy heading to Israel to press for truce with Hezbollah
- Uganda opposition figure Besigye appears in military court
- General strike in Greece against cost of living
- UN nuclear chief welcomes Iran's 'concrete step' on uranium stockpile
- Floods to shave 0.2 percentage points off Spain's growth
- Argentina's Contepomi makes one change for France Test
- 'Steep climb' ahead as clock ticks on stalled climate talks
- Gatland changes four for Wales clash with South Africa
- 'Sport will have the last word' as WRC title goes down to the wire in Japan
- Western powers move to censure Iran at UN nuclear meet
- US envoy presses Israel-Hezbollah truce bid in Lebanon visit
- 'No controversy' around Alldritt exclusion for Argentina Test
- Stock markets gain, dollar higher before Nvidia earnings
- New WHO financing mechanism put to the test
- Besigye kidnapping: Uganda president's doctor turned rival
- Star K-pop producer of NewJeans quits after legal spat with BTS agency
- 'Eternal' Nadal leaves legacy as he retires from tennis
- Vieira takes over at struggling Gerona
- Australia's Kerevi banned for Morgan tackle
- Bellamy defies 'lunatic' reputation to inspire Wales revival
- Kremlin says US 'doing everything' to prolong 'war' in Ukraine
- Magritte painting nets auction record of $121 million
- Markets fluctuate as traders weigh geopolitical tensions
- N. Korea's latest weapon? Bombarding South with noise
- 'Kidnapped' Uganda opposition figure Besigye to appear at military court: lawyer
- Asian markets fluctuate as traders weigh geopolitical tensions
- 'An inauspicious day': the landmines ruining Myanmar lives
- UN to vote again on Gaza ceasefire, US plans unclear
- Japan's manga powerhouse 'Dragon Ball' turns 40
- Japanese, Koreans bottom of global love life survey
- Son blames 'mistakes' after South Korea held by Palestine in qualifier
- Japan ramps up tech ambitions with $65 bn for AI, chips
- Lights, action, melodrama! Silent films get new reel at London haven
- Myanmar led world in landmine victims in 2023: monitor
- ICC to sentence Timbuktu war criminal
- Ugandan opposition figure Besigye 'kidnapped', says wife
- Australia's Jason Day eyes more major glory after resurgence
- Machu Picchu security boosted after visitors spread human ashes
- Popovic hails Australia character in 'crazy' World Cup qualifier
RYCEF | -0.75% | 6.64 | $ | |
CMSC | 0.17% | 24.606 | $ | |
NGG | -0.63% | 63.18 | $ | |
BTI | -0.07% | 36.905 | $ | |
SCS | -0.04% | 13.085 | $ | |
VOD | 0.22% | 8.94 | $ | |
RIO | 0.26% | 62.591 | $ | |
GSK | -0.39% | 33.33 | $ | |
RBGPF | -0.91% | 59.65 | $ | |
BP | -0.36% | 28.985 | $ | |
JRI | 0.08% | 13.27 | $ | |
AZN | -0.06% | 63.76 | $ | |
BCC | -0.4% | 137.63 | $ | |
RELX | -0.81% | 44.925 | $ | |
BCE | -0.63% | 27.138 | $ | |
CMSD | 0.11% | 24.37 | $ |
In embattled Ukraine, spring flowers take on patriotic hues
In her garden in western Ukraine, Ivanna Kuziv, a retired accountant in her late 60s, gathers an armful of yellow daffodils and bluebells to sell at the market.
It is purely coincidental that the flowers in her garden are the colours of the national flag this week, she says.
"But I like it. It's in honour of Ukraine."
Since Russia invaded her country in February, the population of the surrounding town of Vynnyky has dwindled.
Many mothers and children have fled abroad, leaving the men behind struggling to find work and waiting to be drafted.
"People are anxious," she says.
But spring does not wait, and the garden she inherited from her great-grandmother is in bloom.
Most days of the week, Kuziv snaps up some narcissus, drops them into a water-filled bucket, and heads into the city to sell them.
Ukrainian children are taught the national flag is two strips of colour, one representing the blue sky and the other a field of wheat.
In Lviv, those hues have become omnipresent -- in fluttering flags jammed into car doors, in patriotic dumplings and cakes served in restaurants, but also in bouquets of flowers.
In the city centre, two women in long coats bring bunches of large saffron and indigo daisies to a well-attended military funeral at the cathedral.
Among the dozens of men and women who walk in silence behind the hearse afterwards, one serviceman holds drooping tulips of both colours in his fist.
On the train station platform, a 22-year-old soldier waits impatiently with 101 yellow tulips bound in blue ribbon for the girlfriend he has not seen in two months to arrive from the embattled east.
- 'Some positive' -
Olga Fityo-Styslo sells two kinds of daffodils at the flower market -- one their natural colour, the other tinted after feeding off a mixture of water and navy-blue ink.
"We have a war going on, and the colour of the flag is blue and yellow," she says.
"But since there are no blue flowers in early spring, I decided to give nature a little help."
The 55-year-old, who has been selling flowers at the market since 1996, said she stopped working for a few days after war erupted.
When she returned in early March, she was surprised to have so many customers.
The city's population had swollen with families escaping with very little from war-battered eastern and southern Ukraine.
"There were many displaced people, and they wanted flowers," she says.
"In them, they find some positive."
- Bright petals -
Even when they are not the colours of the nation, bright petals are everywhere in the western city.
A medical officer on leave waits for her friend to take money out at a cash point, cradling a huge bouquet of fuchsia, roses and tulips. It is the friend's birthday, and they are going for a stroll.
At the foot of a monument to the Virgin Mary, an old woman prays in front of jars of pink tulips. The statue has been surrounded by scaffolding, but those trying to protect it from Russian bombardment seem to have run out of sandbags.
But the flower business is not as good as it used to be, says florist Myroslava Kumechko.
Beside buckets of daffodils, the 40-year-old says 70 percent of her business before the war came from christenings, anniversaries and weddings.
But that income has now vanished, and she cannot stand at the market for too long because she needs to get home to her three children studying online.
"It's not like it used to be," she says.
O.Brown--AT