Rabu, 10 Ogos 2011

The Malaysian Insider :: Features


Klik GAMBAR Dibawah Untuk Lebih Info
Sumber Asal Berita :-

The Malaysian Insider :: Features


Spanish duchess gives up billions to marry for love

Posted: 10 Aug 2011 08:49 AM PDT

MADRID, Aug 10 — Spain's fabulously rich Duchess of Alba has signed away her enormous wealth, string of palaces, priceless works of art and vast swathes of Spanish real estate to marry for love at 85, Spanish media has reported.

Cayetana Fitz-James Stuart (picture), a regular subject of gossip in Spain's glossy magazines and said by Guinness World Records to have more titles than any other royal on the planet, wants to marry a humble civil servant 25 years her junior.

The duchess has divided her fortune between her six children to convince them that her suitor is besotted with her rather than her money and the kinds of possessions that are considered national treasures, reports said.

"Every great love story should end in marriage," the duchess told Vanity Fair magazine in May as she posed in the garden of one of her palaces, explaining why she wanted to make social security worker Alfonso Diez, 60, her third husband.

All her children were born to her first husband, engineer Luis Martinez de Irujo, son of the Duke of Sotomayor. She shocked many in Spain after his death by marrying former Jesuit priest Jesus Aguirre in 1978.

But her recent match has divided the House of Alba. Her son Cayetano Martinez de Irujo, the Duke of Salvatierra, said just a few weeks ago he had only met his mother's suitor three times and she shouldn't marry because of her historic responsibility.

It looked as if the duchess had caved in to pressure from her children and a rumoured request from Spain's King Juan Carlos not to formalise her relationship.

"I still don't know why my children are causing problems," the duchess complained to Spanish radio station La Cope in February.

"We aren't hurting anyone. If only things could be fixed ... Alfonso doesn't want anything, he's renounced everything. He doesn't want anything but me."

The duchess, who appears to struggle to speak and often needs support to walk, allayed her children's worries by dividing up her fortune in early July, reported media, including Spanish celebrity magazine Hola!

The duchess's fortune includes palaces and mansions throughout Spain, paintings by the likes of Velazquez, Goya and Rubens and huge stretches of land.

Her wealth is estimated at between 600 million (RM1.8 billion) and 3.5 billion euros.

"If in the end my mother decides to marry, we shall go, although we still don't agree," son Cayetano told Spanish daily newspaper El Mundo in a recent interview.

A fan of flamenco, bullfighting and all traditional Spanish celebrations, the Duchess of Alba has 46 titles — so many duchess, countess and marquesa titles that Spaniards joke if she meets up with England's Queen Elizabeth, it's the British queen who should curtsy to the duchess. — Reuters

Full Feed Generated by Get Full RSS, sponsored by Used Car Search.

Apple copycat ‘hiPhone 5’ comes calling in China

Posted: 10 Aug 2011 02:39 AM PDT

The 'hiPhone 5' is based on leaked images of the yet-to-be-launched iPhone 5. — solonomi.com pic

SHANGHAI, Aug 10 — The newest version of Apple Inc's popular iPhone has already hit the Chinese market — the fake market that is.

The 'hiPhone 5' is selling for as little as 200 yuan (RM93) on China's top e-commerce platform Taobao, which is owned by Alibaba Group.

But one has to pay around 800 yuan for a more "genuine" one, according to some shop clerks at a mobile phone market in Shanghai.

"Look at this. It's not the same as the 300-400 yuan ones," Shanghai-based daily Metro Express quoted a clerk as saying, pointing to one originally priced at 850 yuan.

The 'hiPhone 5' is based on leaked images of the yet-to-be-launched iPhone 5 and is thinner and with less rounded edges than the existing iPhone 4, according to the newspaper. However, it is extremely light, almost like a plastic toy, like most pirated mobile phones, it said.

Western governments have repeatedly criticised China for widespread violation of intellectual property rights, but pirated goods from branded watches, to bags and computer software can be easily found in shops.

Last month, an American blogger set off a media storm after she posted pictures of an elaborate fake Apple Store in Kunming, selling genuine if unauthorised iPhones, Macbooks and other widely popular Apple products.

Reuters also uncovered a look-a-like of the Swedish furniture giant Ikea in the southwestern Chinese city.

Apple, which is expected to roll out the latest version of the iPhone 5 smartphone within a few months, sold a record 20.34 million iPhones during the last quarter, even though its newest model is over a year old. — Reuters

Full Feed Generated by Get Full RSS, sponsored by Used Car Search.
Kredit: http://www.themalaysianinsider.com

0 ulasan:

Catat Ulasan

 

Malaysia Insider Online

Copyright 2010 All Rights Reserved