
-
Palestinian camps in Lebanon begin disarming
-
Five dead as 'thunderous' bomb attack hits Colombian city
-
Henley leads PGA Tour Championship with Scheffler in pursuit
-
US Supreme Court allows cuts in NIH diversity research grants
-
Why fan violence still sullies Latin American football
-
Lil Nas X arrested after nearly naked nighttime stroll in LA
-
Texas, California race to redraw electoral maps ahead of US midterms
-
US captain Zackary wants Eagles to soar against England in Women's Rugby World Cup opener
-
Palace's Eze on verge of Arsenal move as he misses European tie
-
Google to provide Gemini AI tools to US government
-
Canada measles cases pass 4,500, highest count in Americas
-
'Underdog' Jefferson-Wooden shrugs off Tokyo worlds pressure
-
England's Jones relishing 'special occasion' at Women's Rugby World Cup after tragic year
-
Alcaraz, Djokovic on US Open collision course
-
US singer signs on for Russia's answer to Eurovision
-
Hundred-plus detained after fans 'lynched' during South America cup tie
-
Trump hails 'total victory' as US court quashes $464 mn civil penalty
-
Stocks waver ahead of Fed speech but EU tariff deal lifts Europe
-
Slot says Liverpool will only sign right player at right price amid Isak row
-
Walmart expects better sales, earnings as shoppers squeezed by tariffs
-
Malnourished Gaza children facing death without aid, says UN
-
Autopsy rules out 'trauma' in Frenchman livestream death
-
Liverpool's Frimpong out for several weeks with hamstring injury
-
EU gets 15% US tariff for cars, but fails to get wine reprieve
-
Leverkusen rebuild continues with Bade and Echeverri signings
-
Ghana singer Shatta Wale held in US fraud probe over Lamborghini purchase
-
Wales skipper Callender passed fit for Women's Rugby World Cup opener against Scotland
-
Only goal is to win, says ever-competitive veteran Fraser-Pryce
-
Maresca adamant Fofana 'very happy' at Chelsea
-
Record EU wildfires burnt more than 1 mn hectares in 2025: AFP analysis
-
Hurricane Erin brings coastal flooding to N. Carolina, Virginia
-
Stocks slide as investors await key Fed speech
-
EU gets 15% US tariff for cars, fails to secure wine reprieve
-
Russian fuel prices surge after Ukraine hits refineries
-
Maguire feels it will be 'silly' to leave Man Utd now
-
Ukrainian suspect arrested in Italy over Nord Stream blasts
-
England include ex-skipper Knight in Women's World Cup squad as Cross misses out
-
Walmart lifts outlook for sales, earnings despite tariffs
-
UK sees record asylum claims as row brews over housing
-
Swiss international Okafor move to Leeds heralds new EPL record
-
Microsoft re-joins handheld gaming fight against Nintendo's Switch
-
McReight to captain Wallabies against Springboks
-
Taiwanese boxer Lin agrees to gender test for world championships
-
Stocks slip as investors await key Fed speech
-
Hong Kong mogul Jimmy Lai's 'punditry' not criminal: lawyer
-
Bournemouth sign 'proven winner' Adli from Leverkusen
-
Israel pounds Gaza City as military takes first steps in offensive
-
First security guarantees, then Putin summit, Zelensky says
-
Suspended Thai PM testifies in court case seeking her ouster
-
Shilton congratulates Brazilian goalkeeper Fabio on breaking record

In a Ukrainian strip club, the war is laid bare
When Lisa, 20, laces into her ultra-high heels for her shift at a strip club in Ukraine's Kharkiv, she knows that aside from dancing, she will have to comfort traumatised soldiers.
Since Russia's 2022 invasion, exhausted troops are the main clientele of the Flash Dancers club in the centre of the northeastern city, just 20 kilometres (12 miles) from Russian forces.
For some customers, it provides an "escape" from the war, said Valerya Zavatska -- a 25-year-old law graduate who runs the club with her mother, an ex-dancer.
But many are not there just for the show. They "want to talk about what hurts," she said.
The dancers act as confidantes to soldiers bruised -- mentally and physically -- by a three-year war with no end in sight.
"Very often" they want to discuss their experiences and feelings, Lisa told AFP in a fitness centre, where the dancers practised choreography to an electro remix of the "Carmen" opera ahead of that night's show.
"The problem is that they come in sober, normal, fine. Then they drink, and that's when the darkness begins," said Zhenia, a 21-year-old dancer.
Instead of watching the performance, soldiers sometimes sit alone at the bar, crying.
Some even show the women videos from the battlefield -- including wounded comrades or the corpses of Russian soldiers.
"It can be very, very difficult, so I personally ask them not to show me, because I take it to heart too much," Lisa said.
But Zhenia -- who used to study veterinary medicine -- said she watches the footage with something a professional interest, trying to understand how a soldier could have been saved.
- 'Family gathering' -
When performance time arrived, they put on red underwear, strapped into 20-centimetre (eight inch) platform shoes and covered their bodies with glitter -- a trick to stop married men getting too close, as the shiny specks would stick to them.
The music started. One dancer twirled around a pole, another listened attentively to a customer, while a third sat on a man's lap.
The Flash Dancers describe themselves as more "Moulin Rouge" than a strip club, and say the dancers do not enter sexual relations for money.
Prostitution -- illegal in Ukraine -- is not uncommon in areas near the frontline.
Most soldiers -- though not all -- respect the boundaries.
Sometimes friendships have been struck up.
Zhenia recalled how one soldier wrote a postcard to her, picked out by his mother -- a "wonderful woman" who now follows Zhenia on social media and sometimes sends her messages.
"I know their children, their mothers," she told AFP.
Some tell stories from their vacations, talk about their lives before the war and even come back with their wives.
"It's like a family gathering," said Nana, a 21-year-old dancer with jet-black hair.
- Killed dancer -
A Colombian soldier fighting for Ukraine sipped sparkling wine on a red bench having paid almost $10 to get into the club.
Coming here "clears your mind," the 37-year-old ex-policeman -- known as "Puma" -- told AFP.
"It entertains us a little. It takes our minds off the war."
But even in the club's darkened basement, the war has a way of creeping inside.
Many of the regulars have been wounded and the dancers sometimes take gifts to hospitals.
And "an awful lot of guys who have come to us" have been killed, said Zavatska.
"Just this month alone, two died, and that's just the ones we know," she said, adding that one left behind a one-year-old infant.
A Russian strike in 2022 killed one of the group's dancers -- Lyudmila -- as well as her husband, also a former employee of the club.
She was pregnant at the time. Miraculously, her child survived.
The club closes at 10.00pm, an hour before a curfew starts.
Air raid alerts sometimes force them to stay longer, until they can head home in a brief period of relative safety.
But in Kharkiv that never lasts long.
The dancers, like everybody else, are often woken by Russia's overnight drone and missile barrages.
Even after a sleepless night, the women head back, determined to put on a performance.
"The show must go on," Zavatska said.
"We have to smile."
B.AbuZeid--SF-PST