Khazen

TopShou: A Lebanese youth startup blending fashion and functionality

Image result for mobile app

By globalyoungvoices.com

Editor’s note: This article is
part of a new GYV series covering the evolution, scope of work and
challenges of youth startups founded by millennial entrepreneurs from
different countries around the world.

If
you woke up this morning wondering what in the world to wear today,
then you might seriously want to give this article (and app) a shot.

Launched in 2015 by young Lebanese entrepreneur Loubna Ibrahim after winning third place at ArabNet Beirut’s Ideathon competition, TopShou is a community-driven fashion discovery app that provides users with outfit inspiration on a daily basis.

The
mobile app started as a tool for people to organize their closet and
pick out outfits while also asking for a styling advice but gradually
evolved into a full-fledged fashion discovery platform where users can
express their style, explore looks shared by others, get and offer
fashion advice and shop online for new items that complement their
outfits.

“We
started the app with a personal challenge that turned out be everyone’s
challenge: what to wear. However, when we implemented the idea and hit
the market, we rapidly noticed that we didn’t get it right as the app’s
high download rate was met with a very low retention rate,” Ibrahim told
Global Young Voices.

“So we had to undertake more use behavior
research and analysis which helped us pivot our idea and relaunch the
app in a completely new way: a community-based fashion discovery
platform that gives women the opportunity to discover, create and follow
trends.”

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U.S. bishops urged to bring wider attention to Christian persecution

By Dennis Sadowski
Catholic News Service

BALTIMORE (CNS) — Maronite Bishop Gregory J. Mansour called on the
bishops of the United States to bring wider attention to the persecution
of Christians in the Middle East to their parishes and political
leaders. Addressing the fall general assembly of the U.S. Conference of
Catholic Bishops Nov. 15, the Maronite leader said he hoped that the new
four-year strategic plan adopted by the conference earlier in the day
would incorporate a robust advocacy for religious freedom in the rest of
the world.

“People do look to America and religious freedom is our greatest
freedom and we ought to be able to export it …The more we export it
throughout the world, the happier our world will be,” said Bishop
Mansour, who heads the Eparchy of St. Maron in Brooklyn, New York. While referring to the acts of kidnapping, torture and killings by
the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria, Bishop Mansour said that
attention must be given to attacks on the religious freedom of
Christians throughout the Middle East.

He encouraged the bishops to take several steps to “increase our
communion with our brothers and sisters there” including raising funds
for the humanitarian work of organizations such as Catholic Relief
Services, Aid to the Church in Need, the Catholic Near East Welfare
Association and the Knights of Columbus. He also said the U.S. church could play a major role in developing a
plan with Catholic bishops around the world to rebuild churches and
restore the livelihoods of Christians in the region.

A third suggestion revolved around the possibility of organizing a
program in which U.S. parishes match up with parishes to create bonds of
unity and solidarity. Such an effort, he said, could be extended to
Orthodox, Protestant and other Christian congregations. Bishop Mansour also called for advocacy with the U.S. Department of
State to boost aid for refugees and displaced people who do not find
their way to established camps but are taken in by individual families,
hospitals and churches.

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Lebanon’s Shiite movement Hezbollah denies claiming it is now ‘an army’

The denial came after the newspaper quoted Qassem as saying in an address: "We now have a trained army and the Resistance (Hezbollah) does not need to rely on guerrilla tactics." (Reuters)

By AFP

Lebanon’s powerful Shiite movement Hezbollah today denied quotes in a Lebanese newspaper attributed to its second-in-command Sheikh Naim Qassem saying it had become “an army”.
 “Hezbollah’s press bureau wishes to clarify that what was published Wednesday in the As-Safir newspaper did not appear in the text delivered by the deputy secretary-general of Hezbollah,” the group said in a statement.

The denial came after the newspaper quoted Qassem as saying in an address: “We now have a trained army and the Resistance (Hezbollah) does not need to rely on guerrilla tactics.” As-Safir’s article came after images shared widely on social media showed Hezbollah conducting a military parade in Syria, where it is fighting to bolster President Bashar al-Assad’s forces.

The photos of Hezbollah’s military parade allegedly featuring US-made
armored vehicles in the Syrian city of Qusayr published by media close
to the organization raised questions the US State Department had to
confront during a daily press briefing on Tuesday.

The US equipment on the photos appear to be the M113 armored personnel carriers that have been in service since 1960 and “are extremely common in the region,” Trudeau noted. The State Department spokeswoman also noted that “the
Lebanese military has publicly stated that the M113s depicted online in
the Hezbollah military parade were never part of their equipment
roster.”

The images provoked controversy in Lebanon, where the Shiite movement is a divisive force, as well as concern from Washington, which deems Hezbollah a “terrorist” group. The group said its denial also invalidated a previous “clarification” in which its press office told AFP that Qassem’s quote was in fact: “We have become more than a guerrilla movement but less than an army.”

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HSBC Reaches Agreement for Sale of Lebanese Unit to Blom Bank
Founder of Lebanese group for disappeared Solide Ghazi Aad passes away

BEIRUT: Lebanon Wednesday mourned the death of Ghazi Aad, founder of the Support of Lebanese in Detention and Exile group. President
Michel Aoun said that Aad “will remain present for defending the rights
of every human being and his struggle for those who are missing. “Ghazi will remain a role model and a motivator for the message to go on,” Aoun said.

Thousands
of people went missing during the 1975-1990 Civil War, many of whom are
believed to be imprisoned in Syria, while others are likely buried in
mass graves throughout Lebanon. Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri contacted Aad’s family to offer his condolences.

Caretaker
Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil tweeted that the case “will not be
dismissed with your departure… Uncovering the fate [of the missing
Lebanese] will remain in our minds, memories and [be one of our]
demands.” “As long as we’re alive, we will not deter from
following up on the case of detainees in Syrian prisons,” Lebanese
Forces leader Samir Geagea said. Caretaker Economy Minister Alain
Hakim tweeted: “Ghazi Aad, your departure will not silence your voice
and that of the mothers in the case of the abductees.”

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Patriarch Al-Rahi calls for an “inclusive government” based on Lebanon’s constitution and national pact

By Asia News agency

BEIRUT: Maronite Patriarch Cardinal Bechara Boutros
al-Rahi has called for an “inclusive government” to represent all of the
country’s groups when it takes office, hopefully before Lebanon’s
Independence Day on 22 November.

In the appeal he made yesterday in his homily at Sunday Mass, the
cardinal also asked the country’s parliament and political leaders to
make a further effort so that President Michel Aoun can reach a
compromise in setting up the new government.

“The Lebanese want the anticipated new government to be an inclusive,
consensual and effective government,” al-Rahi told the faithful in his
Sunday Mass sermon. For the prelate, the new cabinet should be a “government that unites
rather than divides, a government that shares responsibilities with the
spirit of the National Pact and the constitution, not with the mentality
of the distribution of shares or clinging to a certain ministerial
portfolio”.

The Lebanese also “hope it will be formed before Independence Day so that their joy would be complete,” al-Rahi added. Aoun’s election as president and Saad Hariri’s selection as the new prime minister have renewed hope in the country’s future. However, Lebanon’s new leaders face many challenges, from a stagnant economy to a million Syrian refugees who arrived in recent.

These are serious and difficult problems to tackle for an often
waning political class whose members are focused on personal interests
and have been unable so far to deal with the country’s crises
adequately.

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Beirut mother forced daughters into prostitution: police

By The Daily Star BEIRUT: Police announced Tuesday the arrest of a woman in a southern Beirut suburb for forcing her two daughters, including a minor, into prostitution. A local NGO had told the police that a 53-year-old Lebanese woman identified by her initials A.Gh. in Burj al-Barajneh was pushing her daughters to seduce men […]

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