Syrian Olympic swimmer Yusra Mardini teams up with Prada

Mardini flaunted the Prada’s Re-Nylon Bag in a brownish-green hue. (Instagram)
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Updated 30 March 2024
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Syrian Olympic swimmer Yusra Mardini teams up with Prada

DUBAI: Syrian Olympic swimmer Yusra Mardini continues to expand her portfolio with another notable brand collaboration, this time partnering with Prada.

This week, Mardini, who has previously collaborated with brands such as Boss and Oris, took to Instagram to showcase herself with the Italian luxury label’s Re-Nylon Bag in a brownish-green hue.

She paired the bag with a black short sleeve Prada top with a hood.

“Prada’s Re-Nylon is regenerated nylon created through the recycling and purification of plastic collected from the ocean,” Mardini captioned her post.

The athlete, whose story of fleeing her homeland alongside her sister Sarah was made into a BAFTA-nominated film by Netflix called “The Swimmers,” has previously collaborated with the German fashion label Boss.

In September 2023, she walked the Boss runway during Milan Fashion Week. She wore a grey shirt, an oversized black blazer, a knee-length skirt, leather boots and a white clutch.

She walked alongside US-Dutch-Palestinian catwalk star Gigi Hadid, Russian model Natasha Poly and Senegalese-Italian media personality Khaby Lame.

In March 2023, Mardini, who is based in Germany, walked Boss’ runway in Miami. She donned a white shirt dress with a beige vest, beige calf-length stockings and brown heels from the brand’s Spring/Summer 2023 collection.

She also starred in the brand’s digital campaign that month, which featured a long list of Arab and international stars, including DJ Khaled, Hadid, Demi Lovato, Paris Hilton and Bella Thorne.

Having competed in the 2016 and 2020 Summer Olympics as part of the Refugee Olympic Athletes Team, Mardini has now shifted her focus toward her foundation, aiming to facilitate education and sports opportunities for refugees.

Mardini founded her own nonprofit organization, the Yusra Mardini Foundation, in 2023. The foundation advocates for the rights of refugees, and seeks to improve access to sports and education for refugee communities globally, as well as providing direct support to refugee athletes.

“I am doing a lot of activities in the fashion domain, and I have a nonprofit organization and I am doing something with the UNHCR and I am also studying, so generally I am happy with my life,” she previously told Arab News.


Review: ‘Relay’

Updated 21 December 2025
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Review: ‘Relay’

RIYADH: “Relay” is a thriller that knows what its role is in an era of overly explained plots and predictable pacing, making it feel at once refreshing and strangely nostalgic. 

I went into the 2025 film with genuine curiosity after listening to Academy Award-winning British actor Riz Ahmed talk about it on Podcrushed, a podcast by “You” star Penn Badgley. Within the first half hour I was already texting my friends to add it to their watchlists.

There is something confident and restrained about “Relay” that pulls you in, and much of that assurance comes from the film’s lead actors. Ahmed gives a measured, deeply controlled performance as Ash, a man who operates in the shadows with precision and discipline. He excels at disappearing, slipping between identities, and staying one step ahead, yet the story is careful not to mythologize him as untouchable. 

Every pause, glance, and decision carries weight, making Ash feel intelligent and capable. It is one of those roles where presence does most of the work.

Lily James brings a vital counterbalance as Sarah, a woman caught at a moral and emotional crossroads, who is both vulnerable and resilient. The slow-burn connection between her and Ash is shaped by shared isolation and his growing desire to protect her.

The premise is deceptively simple. Ash acts as a middleman for people entangled in corporate crimes, using a relay system to communicate and extract them safely. 

The film’s most inventive choice is its use of the Telecommunications Relay Service — used by people who are deaf and hard of hearing to communicate over the phone — as a central plot device, thoughtfully integrating a vital accessibility tool into the heart of the story. 

As conversations between Ash and Sarah unfold through the relay system, the film builds a unique sense of intimacy and suspense, using its structure to shape tension in a way that feels cleverly crafted.

“Relay” plays like a retro crime thriller, echoing classic spy films in its mood and pacing while grounding itself in contemporary anxieties. 

Beneath the mechanics and thrills of the plot, it is about loneliness, the longing to be seen, and the murky ethics of survival in systems designed to crush individuals. 

If you are a life-long fan of thrillers, “Relay” might still manage to surprise you.