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London, United Kingdom |
Prince William has launched a withering broadside at football clubs, lambasting them for a "dereliction of duty" in their lack of care for players' mental health.
Prince William, who along with younger brother Prince Harry have spoken openly about their own mental health issues, said clubs appeared to only see the players as investments not as human beings.
Prince William, who is the President of English football's governing body the Football Association (FA), made the remarks during a meeting at Windsor Park, the home of the Irish Football Association in Belfast.
"Some clubs don't do anything about mental health. We've got to change the whole way we look after players," the 36-year-old Prince said to members of Ahead of the Game, an organisation that delivers mental health support to grassroots football clubs.
"Many players come from difficult backgrounds and may have all sorts of issues going on.
"So just to have them as a complete financial asset...it's a dereliction of duty, I think."
Prince William, who decried the manner in which players are "discarded" and said they should be "supported" instead of the clubs wiping their hands of them and told to "move on", said he was in talks with the FA over the possibility of organising a "Mental Health FA Cup".
"We're working on something with the FA at the moment, trying potentially to get a mental health FA Cup to have a really punchy campaign we can base something around," said the Prince, who is a noted supporter of second tier English side Aston Villa.
Prince William's rare outspoken comments drew praise from across the football community including Michael Bennett, the Professional Footballers' Association's head of welfare.
It emerged last year a record number of players approached the body for support with mental health problems.
"Clearly, not everyone is earning £100,000 ($133,000) a week," said Bennett.
"There are things you don't see. Players could suffer an untimely death in the family or suffer a serious injury.
"Money isn't going to stop emotional feelings surfacing," he said.
Several former and current high profile players have spoken of their battles with mental issues including Tottenham Hotspur and England star Danny Rose, former England international Aaron Lennon and the now retired Stan Collymore.
Collymore, 48, is presently struggling admitting for the last three weeks he has been sleeping for 20 hours a day revealing his "longing never to wake" but he said the Prince's remarks could be a game changer for the issue.
"Prince William's comments will carry a serious amount of clout and are potentially game-changing for the way mental health issues are dealt with in football," Collymore wrote in the Daily Mirror.
"If this doesn’t resonate through the organisation, as guardians of the game, and through the corridors of power at the Premier League and the English Football League then, frankly, I don’t know what will.
"Football is like a factory these days with clubs looking for the next Lionel Messi or Cristiano Ronaldo."
Former Wales star Robbie Savage said Prince William's remarks would hopefully prompt the clubs to be more caring of those they let go.
"It can only be a good sign Prince William, who genuinely cares for the game, is taking such an interest," Savage told the Daily Mirror.
"This summer, dozens of teenagers who dream of a career in professional football will be released –- and it's important that they are not simply left to pick up the pieces."
Ha Long Bay, Vietnam | Most visitors to Vietnam's famed Ha Long Bay opt for cruise views of the UNESCO heritage site but from tourists can hop on a helicopter to see the area's famous karst rock formations from the skies.
Nervous flyers beware.
A pair of five-seater helicopters soared up to 300 metres (1,000 feet) to offer passengers aerial views of the limestone towers, cruise ships and the odd houseboat dotting Ha Long's green waters for the maiden flights
Helicopter manufacturer Bell said the trips, which start at $125 for 12 minutes, were aimed at tapping into a growing number of tourists to Vietnam -- many from the world's second biggest economy.
"With the Chinese economy growing, you're seeing more tourists come here," said David Sale, Bell's managing director for Asia-Pacific.
The number of visitors to Vietnam grew nearly 20 percent last year, with one-third of the total coming from its powerful communist neighbour to the north.
Domestic tourism is also booming among Vietnam's fast-growing middle class with expanding appetites -- and budgets -- for travel.
Ha Long Bay is one of the country's top draws, with as many as 500 cruise ships in the bay every day and a newly-opened airport helping to funnel visitors into the area.
But the tourist boom has also prompted environmental concerns in the once-pristine bay in Quang Ninh province, also home to home to rapid industrialisation.
"We're under pressure from the coal industry, the urbanisation process, the arrival of more tourists and the population increase," said Le Minh Tan, deputy director of Quang Ninh's tourism department.
He added that a waste-water management system is set to be rolled out soon to deal with sewage spewed out by cruise ships daily.
"We're launching many programs in the area to ensure the environment of Ha Long is green and clean."
Frankfurt am Main, Germany | Slicing through juicy cuts of pork belly alongside rarer delicacies of ox brain and sheep intestine, young butchers at a Frankfurt trade hall cast a suspicious eye towards the so-called fake meat products on display.
Puzzlingly, for the butchers, the fake meat seems to be popular.
"As a butcher, it just can't be that we have to get into plastic!" said Paolo Desbois, an 18-year-old French butcher, referring disparagingly to the synthetic burgers, sausages and nuggets at the IFFA meat industry convention.
The concept that animals are meat -- and plants are not -- never used to challenged.
But increasingly plant-based protein products are trying to muscle in on the meat market.
Derived from sources like soy, peas or beans, the synthetic products are being manufactured without using animals.
And Desbois, who placed second in a young butchers competition at the convention, feels they undermine "the essence of the profession".
"It's just not possible to work with synthetic meat," he said.
Another budding elite butcher from Switzerland, 20-year-old Selina Niederberger, agreed.
"As a butcher, I'm for real meat. I think a lot of people would see it the same way," she declared.
Non "real" meat products have been making headlines lately, backed by investors with an appetite for supplying plant-based burgers and sausages to the trendy diet-conscious masses.
The celebrity-backed vegan burger start-up Beyond Meat, for example, made a sizzling Wall Street debut on May 3 when it more than doubled its share price.
Backed by Hollywood star Leonardo DiCaprio and Microsoft founder Bill Gates, the firm and its competitors aim to turn plant-based foods mainstream and capture a huge potential market.
- Ethical concerns -
Whether meat substitutes will ever be able to 100 percent replicate the taste, colour, smell and texture of a freshly chopped up slaughtered animal is debatable.
But some young butchers suspect their growing popularity will inevitably have a transformative effect on their trade.
"It's just shifting with the world and working with it rather than against it," said 19-year-old British butcher Lennon Callister.
Trade skills are "what sets butchers apart from supermarkets," he argued, but accepted consumers are starting to look at food differently.
Josja Haagsma from the Netherlands, who won the young butchers competition, agreed that synthetic meats were changing opinions.
"It makes you think about how you can use meat and how you can change it, how you can use more vegetables," she said.
"Maybe the next generation" will be the ones pressed to apply their knives and creativity to the task, Haagsma said.
Vegetables used to be considered a side dish, at best, for carnivore connoisseurs.
But in increasingly health conscious societies, where governments warn about the dangers of consuming too much red meat, plant-based products are widening in appeal.
Alongside ethical concerns over animals bred for the dinner table and green advocates urging the public to eat less meat to save the environment, the scope for more no-meat products is growing.
- 'They aren't sausages!' -
"It's very important that we think about it, that we consume less" but "good quality meat," said Haagsma.
"You can use organic meat and homegrown cows, and not the cows from the big companies," she said.
The growing numbers of people turning to plant-based meat alternatives include vegans, who shun all animal products, and flexitarians, who advocate moderate consumption of meat.
One sign of their expanding popularity? Silicon-valley company Impossible has linked up with Burger King to offer a plant-based version of its signature Whopper.
Nestle and Unilever are also aiming to cement their presence in the sector.
The move by big conglomerates into the sector has made young butchers note that changes are on the way.
"There'll be less of this mass-produced stuff, which is also really, really bad for the climate," said 23-year-old German Raphael Buschmann.
However, while recognising environment-conscious citizens are rethinking their diets, Buschmann predicted a limit to the industry changes.
Vegetarian sausages would not be added to his displays any time soon.
"They aren't sausages," he said. "That's just the way it is."
Washington, United States |
A lipstick pistol, a button-hole camera, a lethal umbrella and an authentic waterboarding table: the espionage world's heroic, ingenious and sordid sides are all on show in Washington's all-new, much-expanded International Spy Museum.
The hugely popular showplace that once conjured James Bond and Austin Powers as much as it did actual life-and-death Cold War intrigue has grown and, in the tailwind of 9/11 and the War on Terror, grown up.
Relocated in a gleaming new steel and glass building double the size of its former premises, the Spy Museum still amazes and charms with the tales and gadgets of the undercover world going back centuries.
But now it also depicts the complex and often unsettling challenges of the world of shadows, with visitors asked in clever interactive games and simulated situation rooms to decide: could I be an intelligence agent?
- Disguises, microdots, suicide needles -
The Spy Museum has been one of the US capital's most popular private destinations since it opened in 2002.
The new premises open officially on Sunday, just ahead of the summer tourist season.
On show, as before, is the iconic Aston Martin DB5 from 1964's James Bond thriller "Goldfinger."
But now there is also room for an equally sleek 1980s Amber surveillance drone, the precursor of the Predator.
There is a British World War II one-man submarine, and an actual section of the CIA/MI6 tunnel that penetrated East Berlin in the 1950s to tap Soviet communications.
And there are gadgets galore: a pregnant woman disguise from the CIA and a suicide needle hidden in a silver dollar coin, for use by Francis Gary Powers, the U2 spy plane pilot shot down by the Soviet Union in 1960.
There are historical encryption machines, including Germany's Enigma, and a display on the microdot technology central to spying for decades last century.
Among all manner of odd items throughout the museum are a saboteur's exploding lump of coal, pills that CIA operatives entering Cuba could use to sedate barking dogs and the sketchbook of a KGB agent operating undercover in New York in the 1950s.
"The objectives of spies have not changed over the centuries," said Keith Melton, whose massive collection of espionage gear is the core of the museum.
"The only thing that has changed is the technology, and how they accomplish the objectives."
- Could you be an agent? -
The museum's coverage is global, and mostly without judgement. China's theft of US secrets and technology is on display; so is the theft, centuries ago, of China's silkworm and tea cultivation know-how by Westerners.
Woven in between are engaging, well-designed interactive exhibits and challenges that press the question: what would the visitor do?
One tests a person's lock-picking ability, while another takes visitors through a series of tests of memory, judgment and observation in a simulated spy operation.
In yet another, visitors take the role of CIA analysts in the 2011 situation room where, holding deeply imperfect intelligence, they must decide whether to advise President Barack Obama to approve a raid on the Abbottabad, Pakistan compound possibly housing Osama Bin Laden.
Complex issues are engaged and not whitewashed. The museum puts on show the spying world's failures, including a display of the actual intelligence that, if it had drawn more attention, might have helped prevent Al-Qaeda's September 11, 2001 attack.
And, with a waterboard on display and a video discussion of actual participants, there is a disquieting debate on the CIA's use of torture after 9/11.
- 'The essence of espionage' -
The museum has its roots in the 7,000-piece collection of Melton, a navy veteran and engineer who, beginning in the 1960s traveled the world to amass.
He advertised that he was a buyer of any spy technology, and he sought out and befriended agents and officials from all sides of the Cold War game.
"As the wall fell in Berlin, I was there," he said, and the collection's extensive spyware from East Germany's Stasi service is the result.
Weeks after the Soviet Union crumbled in December 1991, he traveled to Moscow.
"I went and knocked on the door of KGB headquarters and said I'm here to buy spy equipment," Melton said.
While he raised some suspicions, many realized he was a genuine collector who didn't talk about politics.
"I like gadgets, they like gadgets," he said.
"Cameras, microdots, coding machines, short range transmitters: that's the essence of espionage."
The pride of his collection is gruesome, but he spent four decades seeking it: the ice axe that Joseph Stalin's assassins used to murder Leon Trotsky in Mexico in 1940, in the climax of an intense three-year intelligence operation.
Melton is hugely proud of the new museum, but somewhat wistful about the new digital age, in which computer technology has replaced many espionage tools.
"I think we are past the golden era of spy devices. This is now the most powerful spy device in the world," he said, pointing to his smartphone.
Paris, France |
Lanvin is back. After going through four designers in four years, the oldest Paris couture house stormed back in style with the debut show from new young French creator Bruno Sialelli.
The little-known 31-year-old, whose appointment last month surprised many, lit up the third day of Paris fashion week with an impressive and eclectic collection.
With Hollywood stars Uma Thurman and Asia Argento in the front row alongside Chinese-Korean singer Meng Meiqi, and supermodels Kaia Gerber -- the 17-year-old daughter of Cindy Crawford -- and Gigi Hadid on the runway, the brand's new Chinese owners, Fosun, clearly wanted to make a splash.
Sialelli obliged by sending out Hadid braless in a sheer top under a pearl pink coat that sent social media and the tabloids into a whirl.
But his debut amid the medieval and Roman artefacts of the French capital's newly renovated Cluny Museum was much more about clothes than clickbait.
There was poetry aplenty in his dreamy co-ed mix of folkloric fishermen's tops tied with leather straps, duffle coats and silk scarf dresses.
The former costume maker at the Marseille Opera threaded a child-like wonder into his clothes with prints of Saint George and the dragon and Babar the Elephant taken from a children's storybooks.
Text from fairytales also made an appearance on boots and bags, with Sialelli, who previously work for Balenciaga and Loewe, festooning a series of sheer tops and dresses with a pack of embroidering foxes.
Vogue's Suzy Menkes, the doyenne of fashion critics, was instantly won over.
- 'Fabulous start' -
"What a fabulous start!" she told her followers on Instagram.
"Fresh from Loewe menswear, Bruno Sialelli makes an instant mark at Lanvin," she said. "Colours, mediaeval inspirations for an imaginative but wearable Lanvin show... with colourful coats galore."
Godfrey Deeny of Fashion Network was also won over, calling it a "sensational debut".
"The more I think about it, the more I like it," he told AFP.
"After several false starts (for Lanvin), this collection, and show, was a significant fashion statement," he later wrote.
"Whoever said the Chinese couldn't manage a great luxury brand now should be quiet. Fosun chose a savvy senior executive who had the guts to select an unknown young designer and the result was a great debut in Paris' most famous ruin," Deeny added, referring to the fact that the museum was once a Roman baths.
But another heavyweight critic, the New York Times' Vanessa Friedman, was far less convinced.
"There were so many plotlines going on, it was a little hard to follow," she said, bemoaning Sialelli's lack of clarity.
"There were lots of influences from other brands you might or might not recognise -- though not so many that seemed connected to Lanvin's own history, which is too bad," she added.
- Flemish master Van Noten -
Fosun, a conglomerate which also owns French resorts operator Club Med, snapped up Lanvin, the oldest continuously operated French label, last year when it had lost direction and was leaking money.
The turmoil at the house began in 2015 with the departure of star designer Alber Elbaz after a 14-year run during which time the brand became a favourite of the fashion set.
The next year the company recorded its first loss in a decade.
Sialelli told reporters backstage that he had gone back into the house's archives and discovered that its founder Jeanne Lanvin was something of an explorer.
Which is why he called the show "Mystic Pilgrims" and why he ranged so wide in his influences from the British Pre-Raphaelite painters to the Aztecs and Breton fishermen.
For a house in desperate need of a big hug, he said he chose the Babar prints because "for every French person who has grown up with Babar, he is hugely reassuring".
Nothing short of genius is what is routinely expected of the Belgium designer Dries Van Noten and that is what he delivered yet again Wednesday.
The "king of prints" took a quote from a Gertrude Stein poem -- "a rose is a rose is a rose" -- as the starting point of his autumn winter women's collection, which began with a line of grey, faintly pinstriped suits inspired by men's tailoring from 1950s, before bursting into his rich trademark colours.
Van Noten photographed flowers in his own garden for the dazzling prints in duck egg blue, powdery mauve, fawn, neon orange, oxblood and imperial yellow.
Paris, France |
Dior went back to the feisty Teddy Girls of 1950s Britain for its vision of a feminist future in its Paris fashion week show Tuesday.
With black leather jackets, long nipped-waist Dior "New Look" skirts with leather cumberbunds and tartan a-go-go, designer Maria Grazia Chiuri raided the wardrobes of the rebel girls of the early days of rock 'n' roll.
The original royal rebel Princess Margaret -- a Dior addict -- and the proudly proletarian Teddy Girls who were the "queens of the ravaged landscape" of postwar Britain were the two pillars of the Italian creator's autumn winter collection.
She took some of the most feminine clothes of the epoch -- kitten heels with black socks, shiny bucket hats and tight woollen sweaters -- and mixed them with a more masculine and sportswear silhouette.
Chiuri has been on something of a crusade during her time at the most feminine of French labels to make its famously chic clothes simple and adaptable enough for everyday wear.
And you could easily imagine women wearing trainers under even the most intricate of dresses in this collection.
The Teddy Girls were the punks of their time, "impertinent characters with wild quiffs who wore Edwardian-style men's jackets with ample skirts, jeans and black leather jackets," the designer said.
"London always represents tradition and at the same time the breaking with tradition," Chiuri told AFP.
- 'Fashion is a political act' -
The show was a long love letter to the iconoclasm of British style, and comes as a exhibition about Dior at the V&A museum in London has become a sold-out hit.
"I tried to create pieces in this collection in which everyone can express themselves in their own way by using different combinations while respecting the codes of the brand," Chiuri said.
Since her debut collection in 2017 -- when she made headlines with a "We Should All Be Feminists" T-shirt -- Dior's first female designer has put down a ladder to women artists and writers.
This time she lionised the veteran Italian artist Tomaso Binga, who took on a man's name to satirise male privilege.
One of her most iconic works, an alphabet formed from the naked body of a middle-aged woman, was the backdrop for the show in a huge pavilion in the grounds of the Rodin Museum in Paris.
With Hollywood star and #MeToo activist Jennifer Lawrence in the front row, the 87-year-old artist (whose real name is Bianca Menna) dressed up like a kind of cardinal to read a stirring declaration urging female solidarity before Chiuri sent out her models.
- Saint Laurent's killer vamps -
In another feminist nod, three wore T-shirts bearing the titles of books by the American feminist thinker Robin Morgan -- "Sisterhood is Powerful", "Sisterhood is Global" and "Sisterhood is Forever".
"Today fashion and the act of buying is a political act," Chiuri told AFP.
"Apart from clothes, bags and shoes, people want to know that behind objects there are values in which they believe," she said.
It is safe to say that Saint Laurent's Anthony Vaccarello is less up to speed with latest feminist theory.
Shortly after he took over the label he found himself in the firing line of outrage over a "hypersexualised" 2017 ad campaign for the label that put painfully thin models in "degrading" poses.
The young Belgian designer has not backed down from his sexed-up vision for the brand, and his Paris show was a procession of leggy models in black micro dresses and hotpants.
Vaccarello's women are night owl vamps and his only concession to winter was to drape some in big overcoats with exaggerated shoulders -- all the better to show that every one was a man-eater, wearing her sexiness like a weapon.
These were clothes to sin in, to turn heads at glitzy cocktails and nightclubs, with a line of flourescent looks literally lighting up in the dark.
His co-ed show under the Eiffel Tower also made a game bid to steal a march on his Saint Laurent predecessor Hedi Slimane, who has created a male line for the first time at Celine.
Vaccarello's response has been to go toe-to-patent-Chelsea-boot-toe, out-Slimane-ing the man they call the "sultan of skinny" at his own lux-grunge rock god game.
Milan, Italy | British designers presented fashion collections for two Italian houses at Milan fashion week, with one inspired by shoes as key items, and the other by tiger motifs.
Paul Andrew presented Italian fashion label Salvatore Ferragamo's latest collection, just days after being announced as the group's creative director.
And Paul Surridge, creative director at another Florence-based fashion house, presented the Roberto Cavalli collection.
Andrew, who joined the group in 2016 and previously headed up the women's wear division, told AFP he had been inspired by plunging into the group's archives.
"Everything I do in Ferragamo is dressing from toe to head: the shoe dictates everything," he said.
"I started from this particular shoe made with patchwork of colour and material from 1942 and it inspired the colour palette," he added.
"Given that it's a shoe from 1942 but it looks much more modern than that, Salvatore was so ahead of his time," said Andrew, referring to the founder of the brand.
"I thought, 'How would he be designing now?"
The full range of the Florence-based fashion house was on display, presenting a simple, unpretentious luxury range: suede leather, nappa, lizard or snake on trousers, jackets, coats and shirts.
Monochrome trousers were zipped around the body, while cashmere blankets and handmade wool sweaters conveyed a sense of simple and spontaneous luxury.
It was only on Thursday that Andrew was appointed creative director. Under his direction, French designer Guillaume Meilland will continue to run the creative output of the men's collection.
The Ferragamo autumn/winter collection was presented in the Rotonda della Besana, a desanctified church from late Baroque period.
- Surridge presents Cavalli -
Another British designer, Paul Surridge, presented the Roberto Cavalli collection.
Surridge, who has been creative director at the Florence-based fashion house since 2017, told AFP his inspiration had been "instinctive".
"I started to look at the idea of status in general and the memory of status of the idea of refinement, of beauty to make something exquisite."
He went back to print and underline print, "not just on silk dresses but on coats with jacquards" to "maximise the pattern" without making it feel heavy, he added.
"I wanted to define a new modern beauty," Surridge added.
Surridge carries on the style started by Cavalli in the 1970s combining eccentricity and glamour.
Surridge made the tiger motif in various permutations a recurring theme in this collection, reinterpreting it in a variety of contexts: midnight blue, bougainvillea, mustard on one side and in a variant of pastel colours on the other.
The same pallette informed the whole collection, including coats, jackets and trousers.
The python motif, another element dear to the Cavalli brand, appeared as jacquard hand-painted or embroidered in sequin.
Evening dresses, with their ultra-feminine and fluid silhouettes, evoked the 1920s.
Jakarta, Indonesia |
Armed with crowbars and wearing protective gear, three women assembled at a Jakarta stress clinic survey the cluster of bottles they're about to smash to pieces.
"I feel relieved. It's like something I have been holding inside is finally released when I smashed those bottles," Genta Kalbu Tanjung, a 20-year-old university student, told AFP as blaring rock music pulsated in the background.
Tanjung and her two friends paid 125,000 rupiah ($8.85) each to unleash their pent-up rage at the Temper Clinic, which also lets clients bust up old televisions and printers for a slightly higher price.
Inside a bare smash room, one wall is covered with a written reminder: "Holding on to anger is like drinking poison and expecting the other person to die."
Aliya Dewayanti Senoajie wanted to use the students' half-hour session to channel her frustrations as a school holiday quickly comes to an end.
"The break is over -- it was too short and I'm not ready to go back to school," Senoajie said, declaring her bust-it-up session a success.
"It was really fun. My adrenaline was pumping."
The clinic opened last summer in a posh Jakarta neighbourhood after co-owner Masagus Yusuf Albar returned from an overseas holiday where he saw similar businesses sprouting up.
The first dedicated space for such destruction therapy opened in Japan in 2008, with a view to helping stressed salarymen relieve their pent up frustrations.
It has spread in popularity and temper clinics, also known as rage rooms, can be found in most key US and European cities.
The trend has taken off in Asia in the past two years with similar ventures opening in China, Singapore, and Hong Kong.
But the service might not immediately make sense for a place like Indonesia -- its citizens regularly rank high among the world's least-stressed people.
That wasn't lost on Albar, who conceded that life in places like Bali or jungle-clad Sumatra was pretty relaxed.
But not so in Jakarta, a city of 10 million plus with hours-long traffic jams that can drive the most patient mad and where school and work are becoming increasingly competitive.
A 2017 survey done by dry cleaning firm Zipjet found Jakarta was one of the world's most stressful cities based on criteria including traffic, air and noise pollution and unemployment.
"Try to go anywhere on Friday night and it's very annoying. My friend once got caught in the traffic and she ended up crying. That's how bad it was," Albar told AFP.
"Customers find this cathartic," he said.
But smashing things up to let off steam is not necessarily risk free, warned Jakarta-based psychologist Liza Marielly Djaprie.
She suggested that regularly using such rooms could simply condition the body to need an aggressive release whenever tensions rise.
Djaprie explained: "I don't usually encourage patients to destroy things just so it won't become a habit. We need to learn about our anger -- and anger management."