Khamis, 24 Januari 2013

The Malaysian Insider :: Food

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The Malaysian Insider :: Food


Macaron creator opens first chocolate boutique in Paris

Posted: 24 Jan 2013 06:35 PM PST

The 18th century-inspired Les Marquis de Ladurée.©Ladurée

PARIS, Jan 25 — Luxury tea house and creator of the airy French meringue cookie the macaron, Ladurée, has expanded its sweets repertoire with the opening of an opulent chocolate boutique in Paris.

Les Marquis de Ladurée opened the doors to its 18th-century-inspired chocolate boutique at 14, rue de Castiglione near the famous Tuileries Gardens in the city's stony first arrondissement.

Here, instead of macarons and classic French desserts such as millefeuilles and éclairs, the display window reveals rows of ganache-covered bonbons, pralines and truffles.

Gourmands will find both classic and unexpected flavours such as rum, violet, rose, black tea and fruit or sesame.

Truffles are flavoured with raspberries or wine spices. Macaron lovers can still get their fix with chocolate-covered cookies or chocolate-flavoured macarons such as white chocolate and passion fruit and chocolate yuzu.

In the tradition of Ladurée's tea houses, the chocolate boutique in the affluent area of Paris near the Tuileries Gardens and Place de la Concorde is a den of opulent but elegant extravagance.

The colour palette alternates between ivoury and grey, embellished stucco ceilings, Italian white marble counters and a Murano crystal chandelier centrepiece of the boutique.

Ladurée in Tuileries Gardens adds to an already rich and spoiled city for fine, premium chocolates and master chocolatiers.

Bonbons from Jean-Paul Hévin, Jacques Génin and Michel Cluizel, for example, inspire pilgrimages by chocoholics from all over the world. — AFP/Relaxnews

A box-set of chocolate bonbons.©Ladurée (left), the silhouette of a marquise graces the chocolate bonbons.©Ladurée (right)


Where garlic takes centrestage

Posted: 24 Jan 2013 05:19 PM PST

KUALA LUMPUR, Jan 25 — My favourite order at any Japanese restaurant would have to be Garlic Fried Rice. Eat it on its own or accompany it with the delectable Japanese dishes such as Teriyaki beef or Teppanyaki chicken.

Of course the main ingredient for this dish is garlic, the breath-stinking ingredient that every chef can't live without! It's almost like a love/hate relationship with this plant. This species of the onion family has gained immense popularity.

From being a regular ingredient for seasoning during cooking, the garlic is now having its useful oils being extracted and encased by small capsules to be consumed by health-conscious people.

The "stinking rose" has been known to be a natural antibiotic with antibacterial, antiviral and antifungal properties. They are said to be able to lower down high blood pressures and reduce the buildup of harmful plaque in our arteries, thus reducing the chances of a heart attack.

Besides that, garlic has the ability to help manage high cholesterol levels and they contain antioxidants too. Stronger tasting garlic are said to have more medicinal value compared to those with a milder taste.

The strength of the garlic taste depends on the sulphur content in them; the higher the sulphur content, the stronger the garlic tastes, and thus the medicinal value is higher.

To prepare this dish, or any fried rice dish in fact, there is one rule you have to follow — use old rice. It doesn't really matter if it is a day old or has been stored in the refrigerator for a few days. They should not be freshly cooked rice.

Old rice would have lost some of its moisture, so the rice would not stick together much, allowing the ingredients added to it to coat each and every grain of rice evenly. Of course it isn't garlic fried rice without heaps of garlic, so be generous with them.

The initial spiciness of the raw garlic will mellow and slightly sweeten when cooked, giving the rice a pungent, irresistible aroma and an addictive, garlicky taste. You could also add other ingredients, like scrambled eggs to top it off before serving. Quick, easy and tasty; just what a plate of home-cooked food should be.

Garlic fried rice
Prep time: 10 minutes
Cooking time: 10 minutes
Serves 2

2 cups overnight cooked rice
2 garlic bulbs, skin peeled and finely chopped
2 teaspoon teriyaki sauce
1 chicken egg
2 tablespoon vegetable oil
pepper and salt to taste
spring onions, finely chopped for garnish

1. Heat oil over high heat.
2. Add chopped garlic and stir fry for approximately 5 minutes over medium heat until golden brown.
3. Remove garlic from the oil and put aside.
4. Using the same oil the garlic was cooked in, add cooked rice, teriyaki sauce and stir fry over high heat for 5 minutes.
5. Add eggs and continue stir frying.
6. Season with salt and pepper.
7. Garnish with spring onions.

* For more recipes, go to www.chopstickdiner.com

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports


Grumpy Torres gets another vote of no-confidence

Posted: 24 Jan 2013 07:04 AM PST

LONDON, Jan 24 – With Chelsea needing to score twice to level up their League Cup semi-final against Swansea City, it should have been safe to assume that US$79 million (RM240.26 million) striker Fernando Torres would be a central part of manager Rafa Benitez's game plan on Wednesday.

Sadly for the Spaniard (picture), that was not the case.

As votes of no-confidence go, it was about as emphatic as it gets with the former Atletico Madrid and Liverpool goal machine left kicking his heels on the bench for 81 minutes.

Chelsea began the second leg in south Wales 2-0 down and desperate for goals, yet Benitez refused to unleash Torres on Swansea's defence until the game was almost up.

The manager bemoaned his side's lack of firepower in their quest to overturn a first-leg deficit, a complaint completely undermined by his failure to trust Torres to partner new signing Demba Ba in attack.

Since Chelsea signed Ba from Newcastle United, Benitez has refused to start the pair together.

A cup semi-final appeared to be the perfect moment to veer away from his policy yet Benitez, who has been at pains to defend Torres from the criticism that regularly comes his way, refused to bend.

When Torres did finally get on the pitch he hardly got a kick as Swansea proved that the best way to defend a lead is to stop the opposition having the ball.

"We knew we had to score three goals, but we didn't take the chances we had, especially in the last 20 minutes of the first half," Benitez told Chelsea's website.

"We had pressure, they were dealing with it well and we have to congratulate them, we cannot change the situation again.

"I was convinced that we could score. We were on top of them and pushing and pushing, but we didn't take our chances. This was the same as in the first leg.

"We knew we had to score first to change things."

It is two years since Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich broke the British transfer record to sign Torres from Liverpool.

Three managers, Carlo Ancelotti, Andre Villas-Boas and Roberto Di Matteo, all struggled to consistently inspire the off-key striker, and Benitez appears no closer to sparking the player into life.

Torres has not scored since the 8-0 thrashing of Aston Villa on Dec. 23 and he cut a grumpy figure on the bench on Wednesday.

With his reputation tarnished it is hard to see any of Europe's leading club offering Torres a way out of Stamford Bridge while his wages and the fee Chelsea would demand also make a transfer window move unlikely.

So it seems that Benitez, an interim manager who may not even be at Chelsea next season, must find a way of reviving Torres if Chelsea's season is not to fizzle out completely.

Out of the Champions League and effectively out of the Premier League title race, Chelsea travel to third tier Brentford this weekend in the FA Cup clinging on to their last realistic chance of silverware this season. – Reuters

Mercedes seem hungrier than McLaren, says Hamilton

Posted: 24 Jan 2013 06:45 AM PST

BRACKLEY, Jan 24 – Lewis Hamilton rejected talk of Mercedes being a team in turmoil today and said his new Formula One employers seemed even hungrier for success than McLaren.

Before addressing Mercedes employees at the team's factory near Silverstone in central England, the 2008 world champion told reporters he had seen or heard nothing to cause him any concern.

"There is a great spirit here. The guys seem hungrier than any group of people I've seen before. They seem seriously hungry to win and excited they have another shot at it this year," the former McLaren driver (picture) declared.

"Every year there was always a great atmosphere at McLaren. But it's a different environment to come to and a different feeling because it's new and fresh. The guys seem to be just as on it if not more."

Mercedes have made some sweeping changes since Hamilton signed for them last year, with Austrian Toto Wolff coming in as a shareholder and executive director in charge of all Mercedes motorsport activities.

Norbert Haug, the previous Mercedes motorsport boss, has gone while retired Austrian triple champion Niki Lauda has joined the top management as a shareholder amid speculation about Ross Brawn's role as principal.

Reports have indicated that McLaren technical director Paddy Lowe will follow Hamilton to Mercedes, a team that already has several former team technical chiefs on the payroll and is desperate for success.

Hamilton, who has cautioned against expecting too much from the team on the track this season after their disappointing 2012 with the now-retired Michael Schumacher, saw no turmoil.

"Everything feels really positive for me... I think it's important that they (the team) are always analysing and seeing what can be improved and what adjustments need to be made because they want to win," he added.

"That's a big positive for me, to see that they are not scared of making changes, they are not scared of doing whatever they have to do to win. It seems like they are making some positive moves, I think."

DODGY CARS

The Briton, who turned 28 this month, denied any knowledge of plans to bring in Lowe.

"There are lots of good people here and I've obviously had great experiences with Paddy but he works with McLaren as far as I'm concerned," he added.

Hamilton said he had driven the 2013 Mercedes GP car, which will be unveiled at the first test in Jerez on Feb. 4, on one of the team's three simulators and had a good impression.

He promised "to be flat out all the way" but still saw no reason to change his opinion on the challenge ahead.

"I think it's important to be patient and it's important to be realistic," said the winner of 21 races for McLaren, including four last year, who grinned when asked whether he had the patience.

"I'm pretty sure that I do. You have got to remember that I had a couple of half dodgy cars, 2009 in particular, but it did get better. So perseverance is going to be key for all of us," he said.

Hamilton pointed out that Mercedes, despite winning in China last year, were up to two seconds off the pace in the later grands prix and it would be hard to make that time up in a year without major rule changes.

"But I know that the guys are working as hard as they can and every little bit counts," he added.

The season starts in Australia on March 17 with Mercedes hoping to improve on their overall fifth place in the championship last year.

"This is a marathon not a sprint. It's the long haul. I hope that this year we can be competitive," said Hamilton. "If we arrive at the first race and we are in front, it's going to be spectacular. But if we are not, we know we just have to keep working at it." – Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz

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The Malaysian Insider :: Showbiz


‘jOBS’ will be in cinemas from April 19

Posted: 24 Jan 2013 04:38 AM PST

LOS ANGELES, Jan 24 — Open Road Films, the distributor of "jOBS," the biographical film about Apple's cofounder, Steve Jobs, has announced that the film will be released in North American cinemas on April 19.

The biopic will focus on Steve Jobs's youth, with Ashton Kutcher playing the entrepreneur (picture). At the time, the young man with a passion for electronics experimented with LSD and embraced Eastern spirituality before working at Atari and creating Apple with Steve Wozniak.

Joshua Michael Stern ("Swing Vote") is in charge of this independent production with a screenplay by Matt Whiteley.

"jOBS," which was previewed at the Sundance Festival, will be going head to head with another project about Steve Jobs's career. The movie was written by scriptwriter Aaron Sorkin, which also wrote "The Social Network" about Facebook creator Mark Zuckerberg. He is seeking inspiration in Steve Jobs's official biography by Walter Isaacson. — AFP/Relaxnews

Ron Howard sets his sights on a ghost story for Disney

Posted: 24 Jan 2013 12:37 AM PST

[unable to retrieve full-text content]NEW YORK, Jan 24 —  American director Ron Howard is in talks for "The Graveyard Book," an adaptation of a children's fantasy novel. The novel by British author Neil Gaiman was published in 2008 and tells the story of Nobody Owens, a two-year-old raised by ghosts in a graveyard after his parents' murder. Years later, the hero will be pursued by ...


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The Malaysian Insider :: Breaking Views

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Nokia axes dividend to save cash for Lumia push

Posted: 24 Jan 2013 07:22 AM PST

A man holds a Nokia smartphone in this photo illustration taken January 23, 2013. — Reuters pic

HELSINKI, Jan 24 — Finnish mobile phone maker Nokia plans to axe its annual dividend payment for the first time in over 20 years to shore up its cash position against falling sales.

The company, which has fallen a long way behind market leaders Samsung and Apple in the smartphone race, said today that the suspension of the dividend, which cost €750 million (RM3 billion) last year, would give it "strategic flexibility".

Nokia Chief Executive Stephen Elop, who was hired from Microsoft in 2010 and promptly tied the company's fortunes to the untried Windows Phone operating system made by his former employer, said the company was "still moving through a very challenging transition", but had "removed the cloud of liquidity concerns".

Nokia ended the year with net cash of €4.4 billion, down 22 per cent on a year earlier, but up on the previous quarter and above the market estimate of 3.4 billion, mostly due to a turnaround at Nokia Siemens Networks, its telecom equipment venture with Siemens.

The company has also been making better use of its rich portfolio of technology patent, winning royalty payments from other technology companies. It also received US$250 million from Microsoft in the quarter in return for using Windows Phone.

While Nokia, which this month flagged a return to underlying profitability on cost cuts and stronger sales of its new Lumia smartphones, appeared to gain some breathing space through cost cuts, analysts said it was too early to call a recovery as it was still a long way behind smartphone rivals.

Tough turnaround

Elop is under intense pressure to show he made the right decision in February 2011 to drop Nokia's own operating system in favour of Windows Phone. He has said it would take two years for a successful transition, and that period is almost over.

"It is too early to say that they have definitely made it,"

said Alandsbanken analyst Lars Soderfjell, though Nokia's cash flow was stronger than he had expected.

Many see the new Lumia 820 and 920, which use the latest Windows Phone 8 software, as make-or-break models for Nokia.

Nokia said it sold 4.4 million Lumia devices in the fourth quarter, but analysts estimate Nokia's market share in the high-margin smartphone business is only around 5 per cent.

And while Apple's results overnight fell short of expectations, it still shipped a record 47.8 million iPhones in the December quarter.

"It doesn't look like Apple would start losing their volume strength in any remarkable way," said Pohjola analyst Hannu Rauhala.

Nokia shares were down 4.9 per cent at €3.32 at 1245 GMT (2045 Malaysian time). They had risen 70 per cent over the past three months, but were also the most shorted among the euro zone's blue chips ahead of the results. — Reuters 

Grumpy Torres gets another vote of no-confidence

Posted: 24 Jan 2013 07:04 AM PST

LONDON, Jan 24 – With Chelsea needing to score twice to level up their League Cup semi-final against Swansea City, it should have been safe to assume that US$79 million (RM240.26 million) striker Fernando Torres would be a central part of manager Rafa Benitez's game plan on Wednesday.

Sadly for the Spaniard (picture), that was not the case.

As votes of no-confidence go, it was about as emphatic as it gets with the former Atletico Madrid and Liverpool goal machine left kicking his heels on the bench for 81 minutes.

Chelsea began the second leg in south Wales 2-0 down and desperate for goals, yet Benitez refused to unleash Torres on Swansea's defence until the game was almost up.

The manager bemoaned his side's lack of firepower in their quest to overturn a first-leg deficit, a complaint completely undermined by his failure to trust Torres to partner new signing Demba Ba in attack.

Since Chelsea signed Ba from Newcastle United, Benitez has refused to start the pair together.

A cup semi-final appeared to be the perfect moment to veer away from his policy yet Benitez, who has been at pains to defend Torres from the criticism that regularly comes his way, refused to bend.

When Torres did finally get on the pitch he hardly got a kick as Swansea proved that the best way to defend a lead is to stop the opposition having the ball.

"We knew we had to score three goals, but we didn't take the chances we had, especially in the last 20 minutes of the first half," Benitez told Chelsea's website.

"We had pressure, they were dealing with it well and we have to congratulate them, we cannot change the situation again.

"I was convinced that we could score. We were on top of them and pushing and pushing, but we didn't take our chances. This was the same as in the first leg.

"We knew we had to score first to change things."

It is two years since Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich broke the British transfer record to sign Torres from Liverpool.

Three managers, Carlo Ancelotti, Andre Villas-Boas and Roberto Di Matteo, all struggled to consistently inspire the off-key striker, and Benitez appears no closer to sparking the player into life.

Torres has not scored since the 8-0 thrashing of Aston Villa on Dec. 23 and he cut a grumpy figure on the bench on Wednesday.

With his reputation tarnished it is hard to see any of Europe's leading club offering Torres a way out of Stamford Bridge while his wages and the fee Chelsea would demand also make a transfer window move unlikely.

So it seems that Benitez, an interim manager who may not even be at Chelsea next season, must find a way of reviving Torres if Chelsea's season is not to fizzle out completely.

Out of the Champions League and effectively out of the Premier League title race, Chelsea travel to third tier Brentford this weekend in the FA Cup clinging on to their last realistic chance of silverware this season. – Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features

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The Malaysian Insider :: Features


Davos divided on tackling the scourge of obesity

Posted: 24 Jan 2013 05:49 AM PST

General view of delegates attending the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos January 24, 2013. Business leaders meeting in Davos cannot agree on what they can or should do to address obesity. – Reuters pic

DAVOS, Jan 24 – Obesity, a major factor in diabetes and heart disease, imposes costs on both public and private sectors and is a drag on economic growth, but business leaders meeting in Davos can't agree on what they can or should do to address it.

The World Economic Forum has some notable past achievements in healthcare, such as galvanising support for the fight against AIDS and the vaccination of children in poor countries, but tackling the rise in obesity promises to be a much more complicated task.

"There are huge interests involved. The question is how can we align interests? Industry sees the impact on their bottom line. They need a healthy workforce and healthy consumers," said WEF health and healthcare expert Olivier Raynaud.

The WEF estimates a cumulative US$47 trillion of output might be lost in the next 20 years due to non-communicable diseases and mental health problems, with obesity to blame for 44 per cent of the diabetes burden and 23 per cent of heart disease costs.

One look at the list of the strategic partners of the WEF shows how many vested interests are at play – food and drink companies are blamed for feeding the crisis, while drug manufacturers profit from soaring rates of diabetes.

There are also issues of consumer choice to take into account, and the fact that companies selling calorie-dense foods often also make a range of healthier alternatives.

"We could stop selling ice cream, but people are still going to want to eat ice cream," said Paul Bulcke, chief executive of food giant Nestle, which has been investing heavily in developing healthier products, including low-fat ice cream.

Just this week, Coca-Cola, whose chief executive Muhtar Kent is one of the co-chairs of this year's Davos gathering, launched a commercial on US cable television that seeks to highlight the company's efforts in fighting obesity.

As the soft drink industry faces the threat of tighter regulation, the commercial notes that Coca-Cola sells about 180 low and no-calorie drinks and reminds viewers "if you eat and drink more calories than you burn off, you'll gain weight".

TOUGHER ISSUE THAN SMOKING

The WEF will host a private meeting on "healthy living" on Saturday of key players including executives from the food, healthcare and agriculture sectors as well as health regulators and ministers, seeking to get agreement on concrete action.

"To solve the issue of tobacco, we excluded tobacco companies. But excluding food and beverage, pharmaceuticals would be a big mistake," said the WEF's Raynard.

"The second mistake would be to only blame. The third mistake would be to be too simplistic, just focusing on reducing sugar, for example."

The British government announced this week that more food and drink companies have signed up to a voluntary pledge to cut the amount of sugar and calories in their products.

That is the kind of approach favoured by Nestle's Bulcke, who rejects tighter regulation: "It's not education alone, it's not diet alone. It's all that, plus healthy physical activity."

Alison Martin, a health specialist at insurer Swiss Re who is due to address a discussion on obesity with Bulcke on Saturday, said trying to fight the problem with the same kind of taxes or bans imposed on tobacco would not work.

"There is nothing inherently wrong with eating a hamburger or drinking a can of Coke as part of a balanced diet, so it's unlike smoking," she said. "That leads it to being a more difficult, thorny issue, which is clearly why we haven't been successful in tackling it to date."

Instead of focusing on counting calories, insurers like Swiss Re are developing policies aimed at encouraging healthier living by offering lower premiums, for example if clients promise to go to the gym or buy fruit and vegetables.

Khalid Al Falih, head of Saudi Aramco, the world's biggest oil producer, said the productivity of companies was already being undermined by the poor health of some employees.

"This situation is of special concern to us because we live in a region that has one of the highest rates of obesity and diabetes in the world," he said as the WEF published new data supporting the case for more investment in workplace health.

Four out of five diabetics now live in low and middle-income countries, and global sales of diabetes medicines are expected to reach US$48-US$53 billion by 2016, up from US$39.2 billion in 2011, according to research firm IMS Health.

'ALL YOU NEED IS SHOES'

Yasuchika Hasegawa, the CEO of drugmaker Takeda, which has interests in medicines for both diabetes and obesity, said such interventions were needed, given the deep-seated nature of the appetite for sweet and fatty foods.

"It's a fundamental problem. To fix the problem you have to change behaviour, but changing behaviour is the most difficult thing to do," he said.

Perhaps inspired by the fact that all but the very top VIPs have to trudge through snow to reach the WEF conference centre, the most popular prescription is to promote physical activity through simple measures like building more sidewalks.

"It is hard to get people to eat healthier, but we can get people to walk. All they need is shoes," said George Halvorson, head of US healthcare firm Kaiser Foundation Health Plan, who spends at least 30 minutes a day on his treadmill.

Nike, another company with a clear agenda on the issue, recently commissioned a study estimating that nine per cent of all premature deaths worldwide are due to inactivity.

But Eva Jane-Llopis, WEF chronic disease expert, said government intervention – like the soda taxes so vehemently opposed by the soft drinks industry – are still needed.

"Everybody likes physical activity because it is not contentious, but it is not a silver bullet," she said.

"We need regulation to level the playing field. Everyone is going to have to do much more if we want to turn the tide, especially in middle-income countries." – Reuters

Gaultier gives Paris fashion Gypsies, Valentino goes Renaissance

Posted: 23 Jan 2013 06:03 PM PST

The spectacle of Jean Paul Gaultier's Rajasthan theme. — Reuters pics

PARIS, Jan 24 — Jean Paul Gaultier chose swirling translucent veils, the sound of sitars, and the insouciance of Gypsy culture for his haute couture show, while Valentino opted for an ethereal yet decorative look that evoked the bloom of the Renaissance.

The Spring 2013 collections presented yesterday by the two design houses, one French and one Italian, found inspiration from different epochs and parts of the globe, pointing to the diversity seen during Paris Fashion Week, the creme de la creme of the global fashion industry.

Gaultier, often labelled the bad boy of French fashion, turned eastward to India for inspiration, transporting his audience to Rajasthan, with sinewy models sporting oversized earrings and billowy veils in periwinkle, tangerine and pink.

Valentino — under new owners the Qatari royal family and with the designing duo of Maria Grazie Chiuri and Pierpaolo Piccioli at the helm — presented a more sobre but no less theatrical vision. Gowns that a 15th century queen would have been proud of featured patterns that brought to mind iron grillwork in a formal garden.

This range of options for women willing to shell out thousands of dollars for a made-to-order haute couture outfit help prop up the global women's luxury apparel market, estimated at €27 billion (RM109.2 billion) and growing, according to consultancy Bain & Company.

Only a small number of houses such as Christian Dior, Chanel and Giorgio Armani are allowed to exhibit haute couture in Paris, where manufacturing is carefully regulated and work must be sewn by hand in order to be considered haute couture.

Gaultier embraces one of his creations at the end of his show.

At Gaultier, majority owned by Spanish family luxury group Puig, some expected an elephant as the grand finale, but instead a delightful Mother Goose moment saw an elaborately decorated bride flipping up her voluminous skirt to reveal four little children who scampered down the runway to applause.

Backstage, Gaultier said it was not the first time he had been influenced by India, but this time he evoked the Gypsies, a migratory people whose centuries-old ancestral home is India.

"It's glimmering, it's incredible the colours that you see, it's superb," he told reporters, speaking of Rajasthan. "I tried to recreate a bit of that, but more the Gypsy side, rather than the Maharaja side. It's more like couture Gypsies."

The audience — which included French film star Catherine Deneuve and actress Rossy de Palma, a muse of Spanish director Pedro Almodovar — began furiously snapping photos at the appearance of a black form-fitting gown with an exposed brassiere whose diaphanous hot pink veil added a jolt of colour.

Bold stripes, tight pleating and even fringe figured prominently in the collection, where a dose of colourful patchwork offered a fresh, devil-may-care attitude.

Gaultier said the patchwork was hard to recreate, but offered a fashion tip to anyone with scissors.

"In the time of economic crisis, those who are game, take your old clothes, cut them up and make patchwork! It's a new outfit!"

Borrowed from Botticelli

The liner notes for Valentino's collection described it as "sublime art" and indeed, many of the looks could have been stolen from a Botticelli painting.

With founder Valentino Garavani, who retired in 2008, in the front row, guests admired the parade of ivory, black and carnal red dresses, where heavy embroidery reminiscent of armour nevertheless imparted a light, evanescent feel.

The Renaissance look of Valentino designers Maria Grazia Chiuri and Pier Paolo Picciolo.

"We think that beauty lies in the armour, in the proportion," Piccioli told Reuters. "That comes from the Renaissance, the proportion of Italian master paintings."

Silk piping wove its way across a translucent black cape covering a diaphanous white gown, the cape's swirls and geometric patterns evoking the ornamental gates to a garden.

High necklines and tight long sleeves evoked the gowns one sees adorning the marble tombs of many a deceased Renaissance-era queen, but Chiuri and Piccioli's work never felt old.

The decorative swirling pattern on some dresses evoked tapestries, while the sharp horizontal bodices of others recalled the Elizabethan-era.

Despite the many references to centuries gone by, the collection felt fresh and elegant. Backstage, a note to models summed up what the designers hoped to communicate: "You are all beautiful. Be Light. Be Delicate."

In an October 15 report, Bain forecast the worldwide luxury industry would bring in estimated revenues of €212 billion in 2012, of which women's apparel would be a €27 billion slice. — Reuters

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The Malaysian Insider :: Books

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The Malaysian Insider :: Books


Banned China, Russia writers on Man Booker International list

Posted: 24 Jan 2013 06:38 AM PST

JAIPUR, Jan 24 – Two authors who had books banned in their home countries featured prominently in the list of 10 nominees for the 2013 Man Booker International Prize, the judging panel said today.

Chinese author Yan Lianke and Russia's Vladimir Sorokin stood out from a list of nominees from nine different countries in the running for the £60,000 (RM288,918) prize for global writers whose fiction is written in or translated into English.

"These are writers who we have found ourselves enduringly grateful to, who we will re-read," said Christopher Ricks, chairman of the five-man judging panel, at the Jaipur Literature Festival in India where the list was released.

"They write in ways that are astonishingly different."

Around 150 authors were considered for the prize, which will be awarded on May 22 in London, Ricks added.

Marie NDiaye, from France, is the youngest ever nominee for the prize, at 45, and joins Peter Stamm, Switzerland's first nominee, on the list.

The United States has two nominees, Lydia Davis and Marilynne Robinson, the only writer this year to have been shortlisted for the prize in the past.

Canadian Josip Novakovich, Israeli Aharon Appelfeld, Indian U.R. Ananthamurthy and Intizar Husain from Pakistan complete the list of nominees.

The Man Booker International Prize is awarded every two years to a living author who has published fiction either originally in English or whose work is generally available in translation in the English language.

The judging panel for the Man Booker International Prize 2013 consists of the scholar and literary critic, Christopher Ricks; author and essayist, Elif Batuman; writer and broadcaster, Aminatta Forna; novelist, Yiyun Li and author and academic, Tim Parks.

Philip Roth won the prize in 2011, Alice Munro in 2009, Chinua Achebe in 2007 and Ismail Kadaré won the inaugural prize in 2005. In addition, there is a separate award for translation and, if applicable, the winner may choose a translator of his or her work into English to receive a prize of £15,000.

The Man Booker International Prize is significantly different from the annual Man Booker Prize in that it highlights one writer's continued creativity, development and overall contribution to fiction on the world stage.

The 2012 Man Booker prize was won by British author Hilary Mantel for "Bring Up the Bodies", the second novel in her ongoing trilogy set in the court of Henry VIII. She also won in 2009 for the first novel of the series "Wolf Hall". – Reuters


Booker winner Mantel says play next ‘logical step’

Posted: 24 Jan 2013 06:25 AM PST

LONDON, Jan 24 – Double Booker prize-winning author Hilary Mantel said the characters in her historical novels about the rise of Thomas Cromwell will take the next "logical step" to a stage adaptation at the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) this year.

Mantel (picture) said in a video interview on the RSC website this week that she has always longed to give "solid form" to her depictions of Cromwell, Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn in her "Wolf Hall" and "Bring Up the Bodies" books.

"From the moment I started writing Wolf Hall the characters were fighting to be off the page," Mantel said in the video.

The 60-year-old Mantel said she was delighted to have playwright Mike Poulton, whose works have garnered some of the theatre world's top awards, recreate her novels for the stage.

"He's the man who knows about the stagecraft," she said. "I'm the one who knows the characters inside out."

The first woman and first Briton to win the Booker twice for her novels set in Henry VIII's court said she has been inspired by the RSC since the age of 15 when she went alone to its Stratford-upon-Avon home and watched four plays in three days.

"It was a shaping experience, so it really is a dream come true for me to have the opportunity to see the RSC present my plays," she said.

Mantel is working on a third novel in the trilogy.

The RSC also said yesterday that David Tennant will star in the title role of "Richard II" in winter 2013, making his return five years after a turn as Hamlet which earned him a best Shakespearean performance trophy at the Critics' Circle Theatre Awards in 2009.

"Both plays will be directed by Royal Court Associate Director Jeremy Herrin, making his RSC directing debut," RSC Artistic Director Gregory Doran said.

The world premiere of "Wendy & Peter Pan" by Ella Hickson and directed by Jonathan Munby will round out the winter season, the RSC said.

Tickets for the RSC's winter 2013 season, which begins in Oct. 2013 and runs until March 2014 will go on sale for members on Feb. 11 and for the wider public on March 18, the RSC said. – Reuters


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Dolomite Properties dakwa belum dimaklumkan tentang pembatalan projek kondo

Posted: 24 Jan 2013 02:47 AM PST

Gambar fail Ronnie Liu bersama penyokong Pakatan Rakyat menunjukkan pelan diluluskan untuk kondominium dibina Dolomite Properties.

KUALA LUMPUR, 24 Jan — Pemaju kondominium kontroversi Dolomite Properties Sdn Bhd mengesahkan belum dimaklumkan tentang pengumuman hari ini mengenai pembatalan projek di Batu Caves oleh kerajaan negeri Selangor.

Dalam satu kenyataan rasmi hari ini, Menteri Besar (MB) Tan Sri Abdul Khalid Ibrahim telah mengarahkan Majlis Perbandaran Selayang (MPS) supaya memaklumkan pembatalan projek tersebut kepada pemaju.

"Saya tidak tahu mengenai perkara tersebut.

"Kerajaan negeri Selangor belum maklumkan apa-apa kepada kami," kata Sucha Singh, pengurus yang bertanggungjawab mengendalikan projek Dolomite ketika dihubungi oleh The Malaysian Insider.

Dalam pada itu, ahli mesyuarat negeri (Exco) yang dihubungi juga mengesahkan pihak mereka belum memaklumkan perkara tersebut kepada pemaju tetapi langkah seterusnya yang akan diambil ialah mengadakan perbincangan dengan pemaju tentang pampasan.

"Kenyataan itu dibuat hari ini, kerajaan negeri belum memaklumkan lagi," kata Exco Kerajaan Tempatan, Kajian dan Penyelidikan Ronnie Liu.

Sementara itu, seorang lagi exco yang dihubungi, Elizabeth Wong memberitahu The Malaysian Insider perkara melibatkan pampasan dan beberapa perkara berbangkit akan dibincangkan dengan pemaju dalam pertemuan yang bakal diatur kemudiaan.

"Satu lagi perbincangan akan diadakan dengan pemaju pada satu tarikh lain, dimana kami juga perlu bertindak adil.

"Isu utama kami sekarang ialah melibatkan keselamatan orang ramai dan keputusan hari ini menjelaskannya," katanya.

Pada 30 Oktober tahun lalu, kerajaan negeri Selangor memberikan arahan untuk menghentikan pembinaan kondominium 29 tingkat di Batu Caves serta melantik badan penyiasat bebas.

Walaubagaimanapun, Perdana Menteri Datuk Seri Najib Razak pada sambutan Deepavali tahun lalu berjanji kerajaan pimpinannya akan membatalkan projek pembinaan kontroversi tersebut berhampiran pusat keagamaan masyarakat Hindu di Batu Caves jika kembali memerintah Selangor selepas pilihan raya umum (PRU) ke-13.

Pembinaan kondominium yang dirancang sejak 2007 itu berhadapan tekanan terutamanya daripada pihak jawatankuasa kuil yang kini memperoleh sokongan daripada pemimpin MIC yang turut sama membantah pembinaan itu.

Malah, Ahli Majlis, Majlis Perbandaran Selayang (MPS), turut tidak menolak, kemungkinan perpindahan Yang Dipertua Datuk Zainal Abidin Aala ke Institut Tadbiran Awam Negara (INTAN) dalam tempoh 24 jam dipercayai mempunyai kaitan dengan isu tersebut.

Pada 26 Oktober 2012, ratusan penganut agama Hindu dan aktivis badan bukan kerajaan (NGO) menyertai himpunan di perkarangan Kuil Sri Subramaniar Swamy di Batu Caves bagi menyatakan bantahan ke atas pembinaan kondo tersebut yang dikatakan akan memberi ancaman kepada alam semulajadi bukit itu.

Bekas Menteri Kerja Raya, Datuk Seri S Samy Vellu yang hadir atas jemputan pihak jawatankuasa kuil turut sama menyertai demonstrasi tersebut.

Projek Dolomite Park Avenue oleh pemaju Dolomite Properties Sdn Bhd di Batu Caves itu dianggap sensitif memandangkan kawasan tersebut merupakan kawan tumpuan bagi aktiviti keagamaan masyarakat Hindu dan meliputi sejumlah 170,000 kaum India yang merupakan kumpulan utama pengundi di kawasan bandar Selangor.

Selangor batalkan projek kondo Batu Caves

Posted: 24 Jan 2013 01:44 AM PST

Gambar fail perhimpunan di Batu Caves pada 26 Okt tahun lepas.

KUALA LUMPUR, 24 Jan — Kerajaan negeri Selangor hari ini mengumumkan projek kondominium kontroversi di Batu Caves akan dibatalkan selepas Menteri Besar (MB) Tan Sri Abdul Khalid Ibrahim diberikan penerangan oleh Jawankuasa Bebas yang mengkaji dan menilai pembangunan dikawasan tersebut.

Abdul Khalid dalam satu kenyataan hari ini telah mengarahkan Majlis Perbandaran Selayang (MPS) supaya memaklumkan perkara tersebut kepada pemaju Dolomite Properties Sdn Bhd.

"Jawankuasa Bebas bagi mengkaji dan menilai pembangunan di Batu Caves dan kawasan sekitarnya telah mengadakan mesyuarat yang pertama pada Selasa lalu.

"Selepas mendengar penjelasan itu, saya membuat keputusan supaya Majlis Perbandaran Selayang (MPS) membatalkan kebenaran merancang yang telah diberikan kepada Dolomite Properties Sdn Bhd untuk pembinaan kondominium Dolomite Park Avenue setinggi 26 tingkat," kata MB Selangor tersebut.

Menurut Abdul Khalid, keputusan membatalkan tersebut diambil demi keselamatan orang ramai disekeliling serta bagi mengelak kejadian tidak diingini jika projek 26 tingkat kondo tersebut diteruskan.

"Jabatan Perancang Bandar dan Desa telah membentangkan secara terperinci status pembinaan struktur dan bangunan di Batu Caves serta tahap keselamatannya.

"Kerajaan Selangor tidak berkompromi dengan mana-mana projek pembangunan yang boleh mengancam keselamatan rakyat," tambah beliau lagi.Pada 30 Oktober tahun lalu, kerajaan negeri Selangor memberikan arahan untuk menghentikan pembinaan kondominium 29 tingkat di Batu Caves serta melantik badan penyiasat bebas.

Walaubagaimanapun, Perdana Menteri Datuk Seri Mohd Najib Razak pada sambutan Deepavali tahun lalu telah menabur janji dengan mengatakan kerajaan pimpinannya akan membatalkan projek pembinaan kontroversi tersebut berhampiran pusat keagamaan masyarakat Hindu di Batu Caves jika kembali memerintah Selangor selepas pilihan raya umum (PRU) ke-13.

Pembinaan kondominium yang dirancang sejak 2007 itu berhadapan tekanan terutamanya daripada pihak jawatankuasa kuil yang kini memperoleh sokongan daripada pemimpin MIC yang turut sama membantah pembinaan itu.

Malah, Ahli Majlis, Majlis Perbandaran Selayang (MPS), turut tidak menolak, kemungkinan perpindahan Yang Dipertua Datuk Zainal Abidin Aala ke Institut Tadbiran Awam Negara (INTAN) dalam tempoh 24 jam dipercayai mempunyai kaitan dengan isu tersebut.

Pada 26 Oktober 2012, ratusan penganut agama Hindu dan aktivis badan bukan kerajaan (NGO) menyertai himpunan di perkarangan Kuil Sri Subramaniar Swamy di Batu Caves bagi menyatakan bantahan ke atas pembinaan kondo tersebut yang dikatakan akan memberi ancaman kepada alam semulajadi bukit itu.

Bekas menteri kerja raya, Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu yang hadir atas jemputan pihak jawatankuasa kuil turut sama menyertai demonstrasi tersebut.

Projek Dolomite Park Avenue oleh pemaju Dolomite Properties Sdn Bhd di Batu Caves itu dianggap sensitif memandangkan kawasan tersebut merupakan kawan tumpuan bagi aktiviti keagamaan masyarakat Hindu dan meliputi sejumlah 170,000 kaum India yang merupakan kumpulan utama pengundi di kawasan bandar Selangor.

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Is education working out in Malaysia?

Posted: 23 Jan 2013 03:12 PM PST

JAN 24 — We are firmly in the election season and for casual observers of democracy, THAT question remains.

Not who to vote for, that everyone gets wrong one time or another.

But to determine what should be measured, weighed or counted when choosing; then how to compare those units of value with other units or even which units to set by the side to compare; and finally decide which candidate crossed the finishing line from that flow of thought.

For the vote does not happen every day, but it affects everyone's everyday.

So, those somewhat interested are the most vocal, all of them need a decision making matrix — which is a complicated way of saying "a way to add up things right" — and later defend their choice. The vote is secret, but voters have to live with that choice as they witness events thereafter.

Some people don't show up on Election Day because being responsible for your vote is too heavy a burden. Universal suffrage is not new, however when seen as a stretch on the timeline of human history it is a "Johnny Come Lately."

This column will run a series of issues that must be on the radar of voters, starting with education.

Teach a man to fish

Never before in history do countries' education levels dictate competitiveness wholly. While cynics poured scorn in the past on the millions of graduates from the Indian sub-continent and the Philippines for decades, saying there was no point in having so many unemployed engineers, the joke has turned on the tormentors.

Regardless of oil finds, abundant cheap labour and holding the major sea-lanes of the world, Malaysia is a modestly populated nation whose long term future is in the hands of its people and their readiness for the world.

That state of ready is measured by our levels of education. Real education, not bending the rules to fake success as our examination driven structure coupled with gaming the process in tuition centres and boarding schools exhibit.

Autonomy to teach

Let's leave the grades aside. Daily, young people sit in classrooms waiting to be engaged, to learn a little more about the universe they live in. The fuel for learning is curiosity.

How can learning dominate our schools when the fuel championed is exam results?

Irrespective of the medium of instruction to be employed in public schools, for none of us ever gets our way in a massive public delivery like public education, are the policies and their ensuing implementation up to scratch?

The voter obviously cannot be overwhelmed by the system's failures, for even if it is lamentable it is unfair for it to be the sole basis for judgement.

Consider where Malaysia is, and then ask if there have been solid policies sustained with all the support structures necessary to drive them.

Have our kids become smarter across the board? Are there good plans to get them smarter?

The way public universities complain about the general quality emerging from the system is discouraging. The level of disdain corporations express for the general graduates, from those institutions and the coterie of private institutions mushrooming where there is plumbing, has to be worrying.

That the government is stretching its entry-level employee base to accommodate unemployment underlines a systemic collapse.

Again, look for signs.

Has there been an honest and refreshing response, even if it fails, to these seemingly obvious but really highly complex challenges?

The only meaningful debate when it comes to primary and secondary education has been about the medium of instruction. The opposing positions are both compelling, with me on the side of Malay language for now, but they do sidetrack other equally alarming issues.

The capacity and motivation of teachers entering the service is continuously suspect, and schools are adjusting to the teaching staff rather than urging them forward. The exam-focussed system with reliance on tuition centres and the destruction of sports and co-curricular activities fits many teaching staff rooms.

The five-type public education structure — national, Chinese, religious, Tamil and state-boarding — is rupturing, for there are obvious inequalities, economies of scale are absent while costs sear and the demand for progressive education grows.

There is no quick fix, but the principle issues have to be confronted.

The initial attraction of national schools in the 60s to early 80s to the non-Malay communities eroded in the 90s and has stayed that way. Can national schools be truly national, and will politicians back their words with actions?

The kids should not be kept apart, but parents don't want their eight-year-old to be the punching bag of a system because the child is not Malay. They don't trust the teachers will be impartial, and based on open statements by ruling politicians, they are completely in the right not to trust.

Some of the Chinese schools can voluntarily be turned into national schools, they are already taking in substantial number of non-Chinese students. But the school administrators must feel the Mandarin language programmes will be upheld and that the learning culture which has contributed to the school's success will remain.

Through a long steady process, the public schools system can gain leverage on economies of scale and build on the previous successes of the schools generally ignored.

Private schools, public schools and the in-betweens

And perhaps the answer to parents wanting a more progressive education system may be in affordable private education.

These parents don't just want their kids to learn technology in English, they generally want them to do and learn other things like drama, fencing, gymnastics and even more "engaging" Islamic classes.  

The public education system may not be the thing for them, and that is not a bad thing.

If the state can restructure some of the schools to become fee paying with a government grant, then both the parents and ministry of education win. Some of the mission schools and old English government schools would fit the bill.

Around the dinner table

It can be frustrating to reduce the large framework of learning for millions into limited paragraphs, but the immovable feature of true education is to render someone stronger.

When families sit for dinner, children should be able to recount all the wonders of learning they experienced in school. That parents are assured that their children have become stronger because they went to school that day.

Public education is about resource management and giving most Malaysians enough education to meet future challenges.

Even if the reader is avidly opposed to how the opinions are formed in this column, he cannot ignore the centrality of education to the future of the country.

On that token the voter must say he or she factored the direction and policies of education in Malaysia today when deciding who to vote.

So if you have five things on your decision matrix come election day, don't forget education — however you feel about the present system and ongoing policies. 

* This is the personal opinion of the columnist

Politics shouldn’t be taboo in financial world

Posted: 23 Jan 2013 03:10 PM PST

JAN 24 ― Malaysian private economists mostly find themselves in domestic banks. They typically provide macroeconomic outlook and commentaries on the Malaysian economy for the banks and its clients.

These economists are mostly interested in business cycles, which is a code word for short term economic fluctuation. After all, most professionals in the finance industry and especially the fund managers are mostly interested in making money. Money is made during a business cycle. Beyond the cycle, it is academic.

Academic matters are good to know but one cannot use it to make a killing in the market. Five years down the road? Structural issues? "Cool story, bro."

So, these private economists focus on projecting Malaysia's economic growth, inflation, foreign exchange and interest rates as well as trade figures for the year and the next. These short-run forecast are the big five traditional things that private economists have their eyes on.

Those are not the only things on which economists maintain a close watch. They do monitor and comment other economic indicators and irregular issues, which include developments in other countries that may affect the Malaysian economy.

What is happening in the euro zone? Will the Greek government get the bailout money? Will the US Congress increase the debt limit? What is happening in China? Will the new Abe administration really interfere in the operations of the Bank of Japan?

In many cases, things that are being asked are not strictly economics. They can be political in nature. Do you think Obama will win in the US presidential election? What will happen to Monti? Will Merkel continue to lead Germany? What is Hollande doing? Will Japan and China go to war over those islands? All these questions and more affect the global economy even if they are firmly set in the realm of politics.

Sometimes, some people ask economists about the weather. How bad will Hurricane Sandy be? Regretfully, it seems that economists are the in-house political experts, gypsies with a crystal ball and meteorologists all at the same time. It is outrageous but it just comes with the job. It is demanded of them.

These questions on foreign politics can be answered by these private economists frankly. Not too many will be offended by the answers. The reason is that many in Malaysia do not invest their livelihood in the politics of other countries. They just need to know what is happening abroad so that, for instance, they can anticipate the exchange rate movement. So, foreign politics is not ― in Malaysia-speak ― sensitive to the Malaysian financial industry.

But Malaysian politics is.

Despite the fact that politics clearly affects the economy and, specifically, the financial market, frank political discussions are a bit of a taboo in the industry here in Malaysia.

When the conclusions do not place the government of the day in a good light, there is at least a need to rethink how to deliver the message, if there is a need to deliver that message at all.

While the research arm of a bank is theoretically independent, they are under some pressure to avoid direct political reference altogether, however potentially relevant it is to the economy and the performance of the financial market. The conventional wisdom is, do not offend anybody in politics, especially not the government of the day. Conservatism rules the day.

It does take a lot of tact to write something political. Not in the rhetorical or polemical way mind you but as in critical analysis and how it may affect policy, hence investment. To circumvent the problem, analysts and economists express political-related opinions behind closed doors. It either remains unwritten or coded in confusing sentences if it is written at all.

After all, the typical large clients of the banks are large, rich statutory bodies. One does not want to commit a faux pas and lose out on millions of ringgit worth of transactions and deals.

This is not to say that employees in these institutions are political hacks. No. Like the most economists in these private banks, they are professionals and most of them are completely reasonable. The issue is really the line of command; there are government appointees somewhere up there with a big stick who cannot take political analyses that do not favour their side.

And, yes, research publications by these banks are licensed and monitored by Ministry of Home Affairs. So, the issue of freedom of press also affects these banks although to a much lesser extent compared to the media. After all, analysts and economists at these banks have very little reason to write something about race and religion, the powder keg of Malaysian society.

One example of how politics can be a taboo involves one of the biggest domestic investment banks in Malaysia and a prominent federal opposition member of parliament.

The research arm of the investment bank invited the MP to join them on a roadshow to talk to its clients in Singapore about the latest political development in Malaysia. The bank's clients were interested to know because politics affects their returns on investment. They needed to decide and they needed information. This was a chance to get the information straight from the horse's mouth.

The bank was later criticised for inviting the opposition MP to its programme, by a major pro-Barisan Nasional newspaper. That was the end of it.

As an economist, I also had a report that was mildly political in nature for circulation. The management did not give the publication their green light, however, because they deemed it as too politically sensitive.

The publication was not political rhetoric, which is inappropriate for an investment bank. It was a summary of the finding of a closed door discussion held at the bank earlier, which was about the potential outcome of the next general election. Yes, many banks are concerned about uncertainty surrounding the outcome of the next election.

The management was skittish about organising it because of the profile of the speaker. Still, the forum was held anyway because the bank thought the clients would appreciate it. They clients did appreciate it.

The worst case proving the existence of the taboo so far involves an economist at Bank Islam. He has been suspended by the management of the bank for predicting that Pakatan Rakyat will likely win the next general election and describing such scenario.

His presentation that landed him in hot water does not appear like campaign material. It was more of a mild, measured opinion of an economist instead of a raging, campaigning politician.

As has been reported in the news, the bank has distanced itself from the opinion of its chief economist. That only highlights how averse the bank is to politics.

To be fair, however, the chief economist at Bank Islam, Azrul Azwar Ahmad Tajudin, is not exactly a politically neutral person. He is associated with Parti Keadilan Rakyat and he does advise the party on economic matters. His active participation in politics may have worked against him.

While the fear of losing millions of ringgit and the publication permit is real (perhaps overstated maybe but one can never know), the sensitivity is counterproductive to the industry and those whom it serves. Owners of funds ultimately demand returns to their savings and investment. Having critical and frank analyses on business, the economy and politics are crucial to making the right financial decisions.

Since politics does affect policies and these policies do affect the economy and the financial market, having political discussion as taboo in the financial markets makes making the right decisions harder than it should be.

* This is the personal opinion of the columnist

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