Khazen

Brett LoGiurato

A few years ago, Dick Harpootlian was playing golf with Joe Biden in South Carolina when the vice president sliced a ball so far right that it went into the fairway of another hole.

After a more juiced up version of "gosh darn it" that will accompany the average golf game, and despite some anxious Secret Service agents, Biden insisted on retrieving the ball.

Before Harpootlian knew it, Biden was chatting up a couple on whose hole he had sliced the shot.

Carlos Slim Helu, Mexico's wealthiest man and one of the richest self-made billionaires in the world, flies under the radar more than you might expect, considering he owns more than 200 companies in Mexico, which is also known as "Slimlandia." 

With a net worth of $35.4 billion, Slim's influence is far-reaching in Mexico and abroad.

So what drives the man who built a giant business empire across one of the poorest countries in the Americas? Read on to find out.

By Elise Harris

.- In a rare move, the Armenian Catholic Church has pulled their new patriarch from out of retirement to take on the role as their new head. Church leaders cited his energy and authority as necessary when dealing with current issues, particularly those in the Middle East. Gregory Peter XX Ghabroyan was elected Patriarch of Cilicia of the Armenians July 24. He succeeds former patriarch Nerses Pierre XIX Tarmouni, who died June 25. he patriarch is head of the Armenian Catholic Church, an Eastern Catholic Church in full communion with the Pope. The Church uses the Armenian rite, and is estimated to have 1 million followers.

“The patriarch was born in 1934, which makes him 80 years old, and in November he will be 81. However, you have to know this person to be able to understand why he was elected,” Fr. Thomas Garabedian told CNA July 28.“When he talks he talks with authority. He has the charisma to have people listen to him and to appreciate what he’s saying to them. He’s a person that when he talks to you, he convinces you.”

By Babu Das Augustine, Banking Editor

 

Dubai: A weak economic environment, domestic political uncertainty, conflicts in the neighbourhood and government’s over-reliance on banks to fund deficits are expected to keep the banking sector outlook negative for the next 12 to 18 months.

“We expect the budget deficit to remain high at 8 per cent of GDP for 2015, with the government relying on the domestic banking sector for financing, we expect Lebanese banks’ operating environment to remain weak,” said Alexios Philippides, Moody’s lead analyst for Lebanese banks. “Credit exposure to the weakened Lebanese sovereign, as well as dampened profitability, remains key challenges.”

Khazen History

Historical Feature:
Churches and Monasteries of the Khazen family