Khazen

Meet the Debutante Girls of Lebanon’s High Society
Taline Mansour, (center) poses for a self portait on her mobile phone, while amongst Debutante Ball participants, before the Ball at Casino du Liban where the Ball is held.
by: – Time
24-year-old
Dima Arabi peers from behind a curtain at 600 guests socializing beneath
a glittering chandelier at the Casino du Liban in Jounieh, Lebanon.
Nervously giggling with her girlfriends, she retraces her dance steps in
a white floor-length ball gown.

They are the Debutante Girls: daughters of the wealthy, connected
families of Lebanese high society, college-educated women making an
entrance in a lavish evening event. “It’s a way to present yourself to society,” photographer Natalie
Naccache tells TIME. “But it’s also a way to be a princess for a night.”

Known as the Paris of the Middle East, Lebanon was the epicenter of
nightlife in the mid-1900s. And then the war hit, followed by an influx
of Syrian refugees and sectarian tension. Despite the tense political
climate, Naccache says it’s a culture that persists. “This ball is their
way of carrying on, no matter what is going on in their country,” she
says. “This was them retaining their little Paris of the Middle East.”

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Lebanese disdain for public transport

Image result for lebanese public route bus

by Michael Karam

Where in Copenhagen can you park like that?” The fearsome
hi-viz-clad female traffic warden barked at my friend who was picking me
up from the airport in the Danish capital. The normal, well-oiled
machine that is Danish traffic had been thrown a curve ball by the
unannounced building works at the airport entrance and my friend, while
technically infringing the traffic law, had only pulled over momentarily
to get her bearings.

But
apparently that’s enough to incur the wrath of authority in this neck
of the woods. A card outlining how the temporary traffic flow worked was
thrust through the passenger window and we were sent on our way with a
warning.

I tried my best to mollify the situation by explaining to
my friend that the incident should be seen as an example of why Danish
society is so envied. “Take Lebanon for example,” I said cheerily. “The
government is only now trying to implement a plan to introduce proper
pavements and a public transport system. Imagine.”

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Apple came up with ‘AirPods’ in 2015 — here’s how it kept it under wraps

Airpods

Earlier this week, Apple announced a new type of
wireless headphones at a media event in San Francisco. It
called them “AirPods.”

That name would have sounded familiar if you read Apple trademark
applications. In fact, it was hiding in plain sight since at
least early 2015, when an Apple-aligned holding company
first registered the trademark.

However, “AirPods” was registered under a dummy corporation
called “Entertainment in Flight.” 

In the run-up to Apple’s big reveal, Rennick Solicitors trademark lawyer Brian Conroy
definitively linked Entertainment in Flight to Apple — and
discovered a few other names Apple wanted to make sure
it could name future products after, like Beats’
EP headphones
, which were announced shortly after the
event. 

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I have a big iPhone family, and I’m not optimistic about Apple’s new EarPods or AirPods

AirPods are displayed as Apple Inc CEO Tim Cook makes his closing remarks during an Apple media event in San Francisco, California, U.S. September 7, 2016.  REUTERS/Beck Diefenbach


I live in a four-iPhone family, with a fifth on the way, that is
ruled by a consistent theme: Everyone is always losing and
destroying their earbuds. Well, all except for me. I don’t lose or destroy mine, I just
give them to someone who has and replace them with inexpensive
SkullCandy earbuds that I buy two or three at a time to have a
reserve for when a family member comes to me with a tales of loss
or destruction.

This experience leads me to be beyond skeptical of Apple’s new
EarPod design for the iPhone 7, with its elimination of the
traditional headphone jack and connector, and the new Bluetooth
AirPods, which have already been widely ridiculed for getting
lost before they’ve even shipped.

We already know that the Apple Lightning charger design is awful.
We’re lucky to get a few months out of the Apple units before the
cords fail. Over the past few years, I think we’ve spent at least
a new iPhone on dozens of charger replacements. And that’s after
we squeeze a few extra weeks out by using electrical tape to
make a temporary repair.

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The US and Russia reach breakthrough agreement on Syria ceasefire

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov (R) look toward one another during a news conference following their meeting in Geneva, Switzerland where they discussed the crisis in Syria September 9, 2016.

GENEVA (AP) — The United States and Russia early Saturday
announced a breakthrough agreement on Syria that foresees a
nationwide cease-fire starting next Monday, followed a week later
by an unlikely new military partnership between the rival
governments targeting the Islamic State and al-Qaida.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said shortly after midnight
that the plan could reduce violence in Syria and lead to a
long-sought political transition, ending more than five years of
bloodshed. He called the deal a potential “turning point” in a conflict that
has killed as many as 500,000 people, if complied with by Syria’s
Russian-backed government and U.S.-supported rebel groups.

The cease-fire begins at sundown Sept. 12, Kerry said, coinciding
with the Muslim Eid al-Adha holiday. Kerry’s negotiating partner, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey
Lavrov, confirmed the agreement and said it could help expand the
counterterrorism fight and aid deliveries to Syrian civilians. He
said Syrian President Bashar Assad’s government was prepared to
comply.

“This is just the beginning of our new relations,” Lavrov said.

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Lebanese MP under fire for rape remark

The Daily Star

BEIRUT: A Lebanese lawmaker has caused an uproar among activists following a statement in which he suggested that women are sometimes to blame for their own rape. “In some cases, we need to ask if women play an active role in pushing men to rape them,” Kataeb MP Elie Marouni said during a conference organized Wednesday by the Lebanese Democratic Women’s Gathering (LDWG) at the Zouk Mikael Municipality.

The conference centered on the abolition of the Lebanese Penal Code’s Article 522, which allows rapists to avoid prosecution if they marry the victim.

Responding to the remark, journalist and co-founder of women’s rights group FE-MALE, Hayat Mirshad, accused Marouni of offending every woman in the room.

“As a female Lebanese citizen, I am ashamed that people like you represent me in Parliament,” Mirshad told Marouni at the conference.

When asked later about Mirshad’s intervention, Marouni told LBCI that he “didn’t know what that woman’s name was” and that “the way she voiced her objection was inappropriate.”

“If only she had waited until the end of the conference, she’d have seen many women asking to take pictures with me,” he added.

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Lebanon’s Economy Is Withstanding Political Chaos, Salameh Says

Riad Salameh

Lebanon’s economy remains resilient despite the political instability
that has prevented the election of a president for more than two years,
according to central bank Governor Riad Salameh.

“We’re doing
fine,” Salameh said in a telephone interview on Thursday, adding that
measures taken this year to boost liquidity have put the economy in
position to withstand challenges that include regional conflict and a
barely functioning government. Foreign reserves are at a record high
over $40 billion, the currency is stable and liquidity is adequate, he
said. Growth will range between 1.5 to 2 percent this year, maintaining
the 2015 pace.

Beset by sectarian crises and regional proxy conflicts, Lebanon has been
without a head of state since President Michel Suleiman’s term expired
in May 2014, as lawmakers haggle over a successor. Meanwhile, more than a
million refugees have poured into the nation — with a population of
4.5 million — to escape the Syrian conflict, which has blocked
Lebanon’s only overland trade route and kept Gulf Arab.

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Lebanese artist Yazan Halwani on creating Tag Heuer’s first Arabic watch face

Lebanese artist Yazan Halwani on creating Tag Heuer’s first Arabic watch face

By

Lebanese street artist Yazan Halwani was surprised to
receive a call from luxury watchmaker Tag Heuer six months ago, asking
him to become a brand ambassador.

“I don’t normally wear watches
but I’ve started now, of course,” the 23-year-old says. “Naturally, I
was very familiar with the brand and I’m glad that our collaboration has
been an open one – bridging two worlds if you like – creating something
relevant to both parties.”

Tag
Heuer commissioned Halwani to design a digital face for its Connected
watch, which allows the wearer to upload a variety of designs via its
touchscreen, in addition to thousands of lifestyle applications. Due
to be launched Wednesday night, just in time for Eid Al Adha, the
Arabic watch-face design will be available – via a dedicated Tag app –
to customers who buy a Connected timepiece, the prices of which range
from Dh5,550 to Dh37,000.

The
unveiling will take place on Wednesday during a private VIP reception
in Dubai, at the French restaurant Le Cantine du Faubourg, with Halwani
in attendance.

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Cash crunch at Saudi firm casts shadow over Lebanon’s Hariris

By Tom Perry
| BEIRUT

The
Hariri family’s pre-eminent role in Lebanese politics is being shaken
by a financial crisis at its Saudi construction firm, a development that
could dilute Sunni influence in the country and leave Iran’s allies
even more firmly in control.

The
troubles at Saudi Oger have led to a cash crunch and layoffs in
Lebanon’s Future Movement, the political party built with Saudi backing
by the late statesman Rafik al-Hariri and now led by his son, Saad.

The
party’s woes have led many analysts in Lebanon to ask whether Riyadh
may be cutting its losses in a country increasingly dominated by the
Iran-backed Shi’ite Hezbollah despite enormous Saudi efforts to counter
it over the years.

“We can’t deny
the existence of a financial crisis, which is a reflection of another
one that has nothing to do with the organization. It has an indirect
link to the crisis of Saudi Oger,” said Rashed Fayed, a Future Movement
official who is a member of its policy-making office.

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What’s Lebanon’s draw for Western tourists?

By daily star Lebanon Victoria Yan

 BEIRUT: As summer comes to an end, the mass of tourists filling the bars and streets of Mar Mikhael slowly pack their bags and return home. Although the exact number tourists for July and August have yet to be calculated, Joumana Kebrit, director of the Research Department at the Tourism Ministry, estimated that some 664,000 tourists visited the country this summer. If accurate, the number would indicate a rebound from the dismal 2011-2013 period following the start of the Syria crisis that saw tourism to Lebanon plummet.

Her research concluded that Europe, other Arab countries and the United States rank as the top three sources of tourists for the country, but didn’t necessarily differentiate the large number of Lebanese expatriates or diaspora who return home on a foreign passport. There has also been a significant drop in the number of tourists from the Gulf in recent years as local travel restrictions discouraged many from visiting Lebanon.

Beirut’s popularity is not a new phenomenon. Lebanon has long held the image for Western visitors of Frank Sinatra and Marlon Brando lounging in Jbeil in the heady prewar days. Nonetheless, their numbers have been significantly increasing in in recent years.

In July, top fashion magazine Vogue ran the story “4 Perfect Days in Beirut.”

The article’s author Alison Beckner told The Daily Star that she’s seen a lot of interest in Beirut when traveling in Europe. “In Both Paris and Athens – the two cities I spend a good deal of my time lately – there is a strong interest in Beirut as a city and an appreciation for Lebanese culture. I think this goes for most of Europe, actually.”

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