Examiner Staff

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Is Haifa Wehbe the latest celeb to become a Goodwill Ambassador?

Has Lebanese diva Haifa Wehbe been appointed as a Goodwill Ambassador? According to the starlet’s official spokesperson, no, no she hasn’t!

Nisreen Dhawahri denied the news that Haifa was appointed as UNFAW’s Goodwill Ambassador for the Middle East region, according to Sayidaty.net.

As it turns out, since the singer-turned-actress isn’t busy spreading goodness all over the ME, she’s currently filming the scenes of her upcoming TV series “Kalam Ala Waraq” (Words on Paper), which she stars in alongside Egyptian actor Majed Al Masri, Ahmad Zaher and Rojina.

But even that had to go on hold for a while, since the “Words on Paper” director Mohammad Sami was discovered to have faked his college diploma, and was swiftly stripped of his membership of the Egyptian Cinema Professions Syndicate.

According to Sayidaty.net, the Syndicate has demanded that all the legal actions be taken against Mohammad, and he may face a possible jail sentence for forgery of official documents.

Mohammad may be forced to stop and the drama may never see the light, especially since he will be put under legal questioning and investigation.

Will this drama ever see the light?

 

Al Bawaba

Stress test on Lebanese banks asserts importance of liquidity

BEIRUT: Lebanese banks have been subjected to a stress test as a precaution against potential future economic crises in the region, the head of the Banking Control Commission said Tuesday.

Speaking at a risk management conference organized by the Union of Arab Banks, Osama Mikdashi said the test “included all the local banks in Egypt, Syria, Jordan and most recently Turkey.”

A stress test, in financial terminology, is a simulation designed to determine the ability of a given financial instrument or financial institution to deal with an economic crisis. Instead of making financial projections on a “best estimate” basis, a company or its regulators may do stress testing, in which they look at how robust a financial instrument is during crashes, a form of scenario analysis.

Mikdashi added that the primary goal of the test, which lasted 30 days, was to consolidate and buttress resistance against risks in the short term, by ensuring the existence of high-quality liquidity.

“The second goal was to reduce the risks of long-term financing, by requesting that banks finance their operations through sources of stable funding in order to reduce the risks of funding in the future,” he explained.

He pointed out that the Lebanese banks involved in the test were connected to a network whose branches and subsidiaries span 27 countries.

Joseph Torbey, the chairman of the World Union of Arab Bankers, stressed that the global financial crisis in 2008 had underlined the importance of having abundant liquidity in order to weather any future crisis.

He said some international banks had failed to manage wisely the liquidity that was at their disposal, claiming this was one of the causes of the crisis.

He added that Lebanese and Arab banks were improving their risk management strategies to strengthen their position.

The Daily Star

Food and beverage sector faces economic challenges

BEIRUT: The absence of tourists in Lebanon and the deteriorating security situation have weighed heavily on different sectors of the Lebanese economy, and the food and beverage industry is no exception.

“Our sales dropped remarkably in the past year due to the absence of Arab tourists,” said Ali Beydoun, brand manager at Balkis, a manufacturer of fresh juice, on the sidelines of the HORECA 2014 trade fair being held in the Beirut International Events and Leisure center.

“We used to rely heavily on tourists in mountain areas and on the beaches to reach a decent sales level, but we were not able to do so this past summer,” he said.

Beydoun explained that Balkis juice was more expensive to produce than other products because they were fresh, and thus his company could not make up for the loss of revenues from summer Gulf tourists by marketing to Syrian refugees.

“Syrian refugees, of course, would not be interested in buying our products. They’d rather go for less expensive items in order to be able to survive,” he said.

While some food and beverage companies have failed to achieve growth in recent years, others have relied on foreign markets to make up for their domestic sales drop.

“We were surely affected by the difficult situation over the past couple years because our products are not considered to be a basic need for people,” said Peter Daniel, managing partner at Castania, a well-known Lebanese brand of roasted nuts.

“However, we were able to make up for our drop in Lebanon by exporting to other markets, which helped us in maintaining our stability,” he said. “We are present in over 30 countries now.”

Castania is considered lucky compared to food manufacturers who have been unable to turn to export because of the high cost of production in Lebanon, which has prevented them from being competitive.

“We cannot rely heavily on exporting our products because of the high cost of production in Lebanon, which makes our items less competitive compared to oil products from other regional countries,” said Elvire Kettaneh, director of Slim Oil in Lebanon.

“We would like to export but we cannot compete outside because of the high costs.”

Kettaneh added that the Lebanese market was very difficult because the purchasing power of people had diminished in the past few years.

“We have not been able to achieve any growth, unfortunately,” she said.

Slim Oil is also facing a major challenge from foreign companies that do not have to pay customs on the oil they import to Lebanon, which makes her products vulnerable to competition from foreign brands.

Other food industrialists interviewed by The Daily Star at HORECA voiced their worries over Syrian factories that had launched operations in the Gulf and that are expected to impact their exports to these areas in the coming months.

“A lot of Syrian factories have started operating in the Gulf, and we are expecting a drop in our exports to this area soon,” said Jamil Haffar, area sales manager at MEC3, a manufacturer of chocolate and ice cream ingredients.

Following the beginning of the Syrian civil war, some Syrian industrialists moved their businesses to other countries in the region including Lebanon, Egypt and Saudi Arabia.

However, many of those who have moved to Lebanon resorted to illegal operations in order to avoid paying taxes and other dues. This has affected Lebanese industrialists, mostly in areas outside Beirut.

“Some Syrians opened shops and factories, and this has definitely affected our business because they do not pay taxes or social security for their workers,” Haffar said. “Some of them do not even pay rent, but they live in the buildings that house their businesses as well.”

HORECA is the region’s premier hospitality and food event and features nearly 15,000 square meters of product displays, as well as a program of culinary, business and industry innovation activities.

The Daily Star

Vintage aesthetic is the star of the party

BEIRUT: At Beirut’s annual wedding expo in February, the clustering of brides-to-be and their families made clear which parts of the feting enticed them the most: expensive, glittering jewelry displays, travel agencies selling romantic getaways and the dresses, of course.

With so much competition, displays for one of the most essential party elements slipped into the background without flashy presentations or luxury price tags: the invitation.

With a mind to change that, Lea Heshme, a graphic designer turned event planner, has taken the invitation and placed it at the center of party planning. Whether a piece of delicately printed tracing paper or block letters on substantial cardstock, the invitation sets the mood and the guests’ first impressions, she said.

“A wedding starts the moment they receive the invitations,” said Heshme, who recently launched her event-designing and paper services company “A Whole Lotta Love.” (Yes, like the 1979 Led Zeppelin song, she assured.)

As a graphic designer, Heshme is inherently detail-focused, and her concept seeks to unify a wedding experience through subtle paper products and signage that carry visual continuity in graphics, typography and colors. Her recommendations include basics like invitations and decorations down to minute details like buffet labeling and tags for party favors.

The idea for AWLL started with Heshme’s own wedding. “I used to design for fun for friends and for me. I used to do paper gift decorations. Last year I got married, and I decided to do the whole thing myself,” she told The Daily Star.

Her do-it-yourself aesthetic comprised pastel signs stuck in cupcakes, chains of paper decorations over the dance floor and handmade party favors with colorful confetti. This is the kind of design-oriented simplicity Hashme wants to infuse into other weddings.

“A lot of decorations are handmade,” she said. “I can adapt to any bride, but she has to be into details.”

AWLL’s concept comes at an opportune moment in the cycle of wedding trends. The lighthearted weddings that Heshme envisions and which focus on graphics and handmade or upcycled decorations are part of an all-encompassing wedding trend planners loosely categorize as vintage.

As part of an international trend, brides are leaning toward vintage themes that incorporate campy elements such as thrift store furniture, natural elements like bales of hay and raw-looking metals like copper or bronze, wedding planner Nataly Chreif told The Daily Star in an interview about her company, Desire.

Mira Mabsout, business manager at the wedding dress boutique L’Atelier Blanc, agreed that the AWLL concept falls in line with popular wedding themes. Heshme launched AWLL in March at L’Atelier Blanc, which also aims at a youthful but sophisticated clientele.

At L’Atelier Blanc, brides have likewise been interested in understated gowns harkening back to themes from the 1950s and 1920s – periods that complement the kind of aesthetic simplicity Heshme is offering, Mabsout said.

“Vintage is very popular,” Mabsout said. “I don’t know how it’s revived, but maybe because of [period] movies like the Great Gastby.”

Heshme’s isn’t targeting nuptials only, she said. Her corporate clientele includes Kitchen Central, a boutique cooking academy in Gemmayzeh. When she designed a party invitation for the company, she took direction from its logo, using the same sans-serif typeface and white-on-black color combo to create a coherent graphic aesthetic.

“The details are what I work on,” Heshme said.

The Daily Star

Syrian report: mortar shells kill 5 in Damascus

DAMASCUS, Syria: Syria’s state run news agency says indiscriminate mortar attacks by rebels have killed five civilians and wounded dozens in the capital, Damascus.

The Syrian Red Crescent Society also said its first aid teams were on high alert Wednesday after a barrage of mortar shells struck Damascus and nearby suburbs. It said more than 50 injured were transferred to hospital.

Rebels frequently target Damascus, seat of President Bashar Assad’s power, with mortar shells. But Wednesday’s barrage appears to be one of the heaviest in weeks.

SANA said the deaths included a man who was killed when two mortar shells slammed into the Faihaa Sports City in Damascus, and another who died when mortar shells hit the predominantly Alawite Mazzeh 86 district of the capital.

Associated Press

LF to announce Geagea’s candidacy for president

BEIRUT: The Lebanese Forces will announce this week Samir Geagea’s candidacy for president, the country’s top Christian post, the party said Wednesday.

“We will hold a news conference Friday and announce Geagea’s candidacy for president,” an LF spokesperson told The Daily Star.

Geagea said last week he was a “natural candidate” to succeed President Michel Sleiman and vowed to prioritize the controversial issue of Hezbollah’s military involvement in Syria if elected.

The LF leader is a staunch critic of Hezbollah, Iran and the Syrian regime and one of the main pillars of the Western-backed March 14 coalition.

He completely refused to work alongside Hezbollah in Prime Minister Tammam Salam’s national unity government, which was formed last month, with the party’s withdrawal from Syria set as a condition for his participation in the new Cabinet.

Geagea’s rival, MP Michel Aoun has also hinted at his interest in running for the presidency.

On March 25, Lebanon entered its two-month constitutional deadline to elect a new head of state in which the speaker is expected to convene Parliament for a vote.

Born on Oct. 26, 1952, in the Beirut eastern suburb of Ain al-Rummaneh, Geagea joined the Kataeb party in his early years and later became the head of the Lebanese Forces militia in 1986.

He was arrested in 1994 over his suspected involvement in a bomb attack on the Our Lady of Salvation Church the same year. He was also sentenced to life imprisonment over his alleged involvement in political assassinations during the Civil War and was not released until July 2005, when Parliament passed an amnesty law.

Geagea was also the target of an attempted assassination in 2012 in his Maarab residence and has accused the Syrian regime and its allies in Lebanon of being behind the killings of political figures in the country.

The Daily Star

AUB students ‘occupy’ campus building

BEIRUT: Students at the American University of Beirut Wednesday erected tents on campus in a symbolic occupation of a central building in protest of the proposed tuition hike.

The move is the latest escalation by students who oppose the proposed tuition increase for next year, something the administration says is needed due to the funds needed to maintain AUB’s standard of operations.

A member of the student committee helping to organize the protest said AUB President Peter Dorman allowed the three-day occupation on condition that protesters were separated in single sex, alcohol-free tents.

Some activists and student leaders played cards while others studied in the camp as faculty and staff surveyed the scene.

Policemen were stationed at all entrances to the Beirut university. Students at the protest camp insisted that they were committed to nonviolence.

The Daily Star

Lebanon public sector strikes over pay raise

BEIRIUT: Teachers and public servants across Lebanon observed a one-day strike Wednesday to protest delay in approving a salary raise bill.

All public school teachers and vocational academies shut down in response to the Union Coordination Committee’s call for a daylong strike.

Only 50 percent of private schools, however, committed to the action called for by the UCC, a coalition of private and public school teachers and public sector employees.

Teachers and public employees are scheduled to hold a sit-in before midday in Downtown Beirut to protest Parliamentary Joint Committes’ failure to pass a draft law that would increase their pay.

They have threatened to step up their actions if their demands are not met.

Parliament, which began three-day meetings Tuesday to discuss a number of bills, is not scheduled to debate the salary increase.

Lebanon’s Central Bank Governor Riad Salameh called for an installment plan to pay the wage hikes in a bid to ease pressure on the Treasury’s finances and avoid inflation.

“I’m not against the pay raise in principle, but approval should be accompanied by reforms,” Salameh told the local daily Al-Joumhouria in remarks published Wednesday.

“I believe that the most appropriate solution at the moment would be an installment [plan],” he added.

Salameh said taxes to finance the salary scale constitute 4 percent of GDP.

Electricite de Liban contract workers will join the protesters in Downtown to demand a bill be amended so that they can become permanent employees.

Parliament formed a committee comprising MPs from various blocs in a bid to reach an agreement over the draft law.

Some EDL protesters tried to make their way to Parliament Tuesday, engaging in fistfights with anti-riot police. A Lebanese Army unit and Parliament police took strict security measures around Parliament Wednesday to prevent protesters from approaching the building.

The Daily Star

43rd ACCESS Annual Dinner

Save the Date for the 43rd ACCESS Annual Dinner on Saturday, April 12, 2014 in the Detroit Marriot at the Renaissance Center.

11th Annual Images and Perceptions Diversity Conference

“Embracing Diversity, Empowering Communities”
As a diverse nation, many American organizations and institutions experience daily interactions between various religions, ethnicities, and races. The Images and Perceptions Diversity Conference brings Americans together and creates an atmosphere of networking, conversation and an increased understanding among cultural divides.

Professionals need access to diversity information and training, in all fields, in the evolving role in their environment. Our goal: continue providing enriching conferences and conversations to minimize the divide and strengthen our businesses, schools or agencies, learn and promote the positive role diversity plays in all aspects of our daily lives.

Edward James Olmos, Golden Globe Winner, Academy Award Nominee, activist/actor, producer and star of critically acclaimed films “Selena”, “Stand and Deliver”, and “Walkout” and star of Television’s “The West Wing”, “American Family: Journey of Dreams”, “Miami Vice” and “Battlestar Galactica” will keynote The 11th Annual Images and Perceptions Diversity Conference on, April 10, 2014 in Dearborn,MI , CEU’s to eligible professionals and SCECH’s to Administrators, Educators, Counselors, Therapists, and more.

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