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China's 15th National Games close in Shenzhen

China

China

China

China's 15th National Games close in Shenzhen

2025-11-22 20:29 Last Updated At:21:07

China's 15th National Games, the country's highest-level and largest national multi-sport event, closed in the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen on Friday evening.

At the closing ceremony, athletes from 37 delegations representing China's provinces, municipalities, autonomous regions, Hong Kong and Macao special administrative regions, Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps, and three sports associations marched into the venue amid uplifting music and warm applause from the audience.

Wang Huning, chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, officially declared the Games close.

Flags of the National Games of People's Republic of China and the 15th National Games were lowered at the ceremony, and the cauldron flame was extinguished amid melodious sound of the cellos.

For the first time in its 66-year history, the nation's premier multi-sport event expanded beyond the mainland, with Guangdong, Hong Kong and Macao jointly hosting a multi-city celebration of sport that also served as a new platform for regional integration.

The quadrennial event passed the baton to Hunan Province in central China.

The 15th National Games, which officially opened on Nov 9, featured 34 sports and 419 events in the competitive program, as well as 23 sports and 166 events in the mass participation program.

The Games set eight world records, five world youth records, 13 Asian records, 10 Asian youth records, 14 national records, and seven national youth records across disciplines, including athletics, swimming, shooting, weightlifting, track cycling, and sport climbing.

Notably, athletes in 12 events at the Games delivered performances that surpassed the winning marks set at the Paris Olympics, underscoring the growing global competitiveness of Chinese sports.

China's 15th National Games close in Shenzhen

China's 15th National Games close in Shenzhen

China's 15th National Games close in Shenzhen

China's 15th National Games close in Shenzhen

Germany's economic recovery faces new headwinds from the escalating tensions in the Middle East, said Clemens Fuest, president of the renowned ifo Institute for Economic Research, one of Germany's largest economic think-tanks.

Fuest warned that the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran is undermining Germany's fragile economic rebound, compounding existing challenges from U.S. tariff policies.

"Germany is very heavily reliant on foreign trade and has been affected by U.S. tariff policies. Germany is at present in a difficult economic situation. We are currently at the same level as in 2019, which means six years of stagnation, now in its seventh year. And now the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran has been added to the mix. It was actually expected that growth would return this year, driven by government spending and borrowing, but the war with Iran has now intervened, meaning that growth this year will likely be weak, at around 0.6 percent," he said.

Fuest said that while Germany is not currently facing immediate shortages in energy supplies such as natural gas, disruptions to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz pose significant risks to global energy stability, and such disruptions would inevitably impact global industrial and supply chains, creating additional obstacles for Germany's economic recovery.

US-Israel war on Iran threatens Germany' economic recovery: expert

US-Israel war on Iran threatens Germany' economic recovery: expert

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