9 severely ill kids to hit screens as superheroes in Dubai

What does it take to bring a smile on the faces of children battling with life-threatening diseases? Sometimes, a simple initiative like transforming these tiny tots into superheroes is enough to get them beaming from ear to ear. That said, it also instils inner strength and positivity that helps them combat the rigours of the treatment.

Nine kids, including two Emiratis, who are currently receiving treatment for haematology and oncology conditions in the UK, were dressed up in their favourite superhero costumes as part of a Dubai-born initiative, Superhope.

In its second edition now, Superhope collaborated with Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children in London to have illustrators and costume designers bring to life the superheroes dreams of the children.

The little ones were seen stepping outside the confines of their illness, as they dressed up in their favourite fictional characters – such as Super A,

Bat Jake, Coloring Freya, Cloud Princess and JA – while shooting for a campaign film that will soon premiere in Vox Cinemas.

Speaking on the sidelines of the event, Tarik Batal and Basma Masri, creators of Superhope, said: “Seeing the faces of the children when they wear the super suits is a very special moment. It’s very rewarding.”

Emirati parents of the character Super A said: “Ahmed has really enjoyed the process. When they get back to school, they want to tell everyone about all the amazing things like turning them into a superhero”.

The heart-warming trailer will be played across VOX Cinemas for four weeks.

Covid-19: Global coronavirus death toll passes 3,000; spreads to over 60 countries

The global death toll from the new coronavirus epidemic surpassed 3,000 on Monday after more people died at its epicentre in China, as cases soared around the world and US officials faced criticism over the country’s readiness for an outbreak.

(Coronavirus outbreak: All the latest updates)

The virus has now infected more than 88,000 people and spread to more than 60 countries after first emerging in China late last year.

South Korea, the biggest nest of infections outside China, reported nearly 500 new cases on Monday, bringing its total past 4,000.

With fears of a pandemic on the rise, the World Health Organization urged all countries to stock up on critical care ventilators to treat patients with severe symptoms of the deadly respiratory disease.

The rapid spread of the coronavirus has raised fears over its impact on the world economy, causing global markets to log their worst losses since the 2008 financial crisis.

China’s economy has ground to a halt with large swathes of the country under quarantine or measures to restrict travel.

Other countries have started to enact their own drastic containment measures, including banning arrivals from virus-hit countries, locking down towns, urging citizens to stay home and suspending major events such as football matches or trade fairs.

(Coronavirus: Everything you need to know about the Covid-19 Wuhan virus outbreak)

In a stark example of growing global anxiety, the Louvre – the world’s most visited museum – closed on Sunday after staff refused to work over fears about the virus.

China reported 42 more deaths on Monday – all in central Hubei province. The virus is believed to have originated in a market that sold wild animals in Hubei’s capital, Wuhan.

The death toll in China alone rose to 2,912, but it is also rising abroad, with the second highest tally in Iran with 54, while the United States and Australia had their first fatalities from the disease over the weekend.

The WHO says the virus appears to particularly hit those over the age of 60 and people already weakened by other illness.

It has a mortality rate ranging between two and five percent – much higher than the flu, at 0.1 percent, but lower than another coronavirus-linked illness, SARS, which had a 9.5 percent death rate when it killed nearly 800 people in 2002-2003.

But infections are also rising faster abroad than in China now, as the country’s drastic measures, including quarantining some 56 million people in Hubei since late January, appear to be paying off.

After an increase on Sunday, China’s National Health Commission reported 202 new infections on Monday, the lowest daily rise since late January. There have been more than 80,000 infections in the world’s most populous country.

By contrast, infections are soaring elsewhere.

Four more people died in South Korea, taking its toll to 22.

Infection numbers have surged in recent days and the country’s central bank has warned of negative growth in the first quarter, noting the epidemic will hit both consumption and exports.

The figures are expected to rise further as authorities test more than 260,000 people associated with the Shincheonji Church of Jesus, a religious group often condemned as a cult that is linked to more than half the cases.

Infections nearly doubled over the weekend in Italy, Europe’s hardest hit country with nearly 1,700 cases.

Rome said Sunday it would deliver 3.6 billion euros ($4 million) in emergency aid to sectors affected by the virus.

President Donald Trump has downplayed concerns of a major outbreak in the US but his government has come in for criticism over its response to the threat.

Vice President Mike Pence and Health Secretary Alex Azar defended the administration’s handling of the virus, while seeking to reassure Americans and promising to make up for shortfalls in virus testing kits.

“We could have more sad news, but the American people should know the risk to the average American remains low,” Pence told CNN.

The assurances came a day after officials confirmed that a man in his 50s had died in northwestern Washington state.

He was one of a handful of people with no known links to global hot zones to have contracted the virus – indicating that the pathogen was now likely spreading in communities.

“We will see more cases,” Azar said. “But it’s important to remember, for the vast majority of individuals who contract the novel coronavirus, they will experience mild to moderate symptoms.”

Jamie Koufos

Jamie Koufos dreams to be a professional fitness model and to transform that dream into reality he has put all his effort in it. Starting early, at the age of 25 years he has been voted among the top 10 best personal trainers in Melbourne, Australia and made to the list of top 4 WBFF Australian fitness model. Associated with EHP labs, he feels passionate to transform other into the best shape of their life. It’s all his effort that led him to where he’s at this point in life.
With his in-depth knowledge in the field of fitness and how our body adapts to work-out and diet, Jamie with his team has launched well-balanced high protein, clean carbohydrate and low-fat meal system in order to achieve fitness goals. These meals can be customized depending on user’s choice, allergies and priorities, which can be delivered online within a 32Km radius of Melbourne CBD.

As he knows the importance and impact of fitness in one’s life and eventually wants to encourage others as well. Jamie has been assisting people online by mentoring them towards a healthy lifestyle. Further, he is planning to launch a podcast for users to have a better experience of the same.

 

 

 

 

 

–   A to Z services

Anmol Singh

In order to promote his passion for trading, Mr. Anmol Singh launched “LiveTraders.com” in the year 2015 that ranked #1 for three continuous years as the best trading education firm. He has assisted more than thousands of traders all over the world dealing with psychological and Behavioral issues resulting when high stakes are on the line that helped him become a leading expert in Trading Psychological space. His passion for trading is not limited to himself as he prefers to invest his valuable time working with students of Live Trader and helps them financially to uplift their own hedge funds. Mr. Anmol vision is not limited to shares as he adores a keen interest in Real Estate and various entrepreneurial ventures and franchise store in the automotive sector.

Mr. Anmol Singh considers success to be a subjective topic that helps him encourage million dollar traders irrespective of the industry they were into.

 

To be specific, the book is focused on to achieving success in various fields of your life and not about business and trading.

 

#>Hello Anmol, can you please tell us a bit about yourself?

— I try to keep myself indulged with managing funds and working with students of LiveTraders which I co-founded in 2014. Trading helps me stay organized and passionate about life. At first, trading was not as easy as it is for me today but it was the continuous effort that led to discover a pattern and eventually generate profit out of it for myself as well as the investors. Along with this, I have funded two other tech-based companies.

 

#>What are your focus areas and why?

–I feel it’s a dynamic world and you can’t simply focus on a single topic and therefore try to maintain a versatile portfolio to manage and maintain. For now, I am working in stocks, forex markets and online social media industry along with Real estate investment opportunities.

 

#>How do you describe “LiveTraders” in few words?

–LiveTraders is focused on creating a platform for people interested in trading by proving training and educational courses to implement their knowledge and learnings of trading. To do so, Live Trade offers a live trading room where the participants can analyze trades in real time on screens and hear audio of it as well.  With all this, we also serve the funds required to trade in exchange for a percentage of what the users make trading with us, for those who are interested in taking this as a career.

Diego with wife Cintia and their Children in Orlando Florida

I conquered because I didn’t get used to it and ran after it “says Entrepreneur who won the crisis in Brazil!

Diego Fortes in his beauty salon with one of his famous clients, actress Juliana Paes

In the midst of the economic crisis that plagues the country, many Brazilians have been looking for good examples to mirror, with stories of overcoming, entrepreneurship and professional growth. One of these examples is Casal Fortes, who came from unemployment to professional success as beauty professionals, speakers and entrepreneurs.
Diego Fortes (34), tells how it all started: “The idea came from a need and a vision of opportunity. When the two of us really saw the siege close and no job door opened, we had no choice but to undertake. One day, looking at a Mega Hair professional, we had an insight that I could, given market demand, do that. 10 years ago there were no specialized salons in Mega Hair. I wanted to offer a total service to these customers, in addition to the application only, in addition to support and maintenance for the application ”.

Diego says he started to apply mega hair without having attended a course: “I used everything I knew from my own experience, because my wife had used Mega Hair since she was 16 years old. Because she had very thin hair. Cintia Fortes my wife made a card improvised visit, and went to a mall, handing over our card from store to store, and talking about Mega Hair, so that was when the manager of one of the stores said she would like to do Mega Hair. She was our first customer. I believed “.

Diego Fortes with wife Cintia and their children in Orlando, Florida

Through the social network, Diego and Cintia began to advertise their services, and went through periods of great struggle until reaching success: “After 6 years of struggle and with few customers, our work began to be recognized, and in the last 4 years demand only increases. Because of our exclusive technique, imperceptible to the touch and with placement in 40 minutes, some celebrities started to become interested in our work, and then we went viral on social networks ”, he reveals.

Today the salon in Barra da Tijuca in Rio de Janeiro, has become a reference in Maga Hair throughout Brazil, and is frequented by celebrities like Juliana Paes, Aline, Riscado, Carol Nakamura: “when Juliana Paes met us, she was delighted with our work and chose to do with us the transformation of Bibi, her character from the soap opera A Força do Querer. At the end of last year, we went to the É de Casa program of REDE GLOBO Talk about Mega Hair Ao Vivo and tell our story of overcoming ”.

Kuwait orders closure of pharmacies for hiking face mask prices

The Kuwaiti Ministry of Trade and Industry on Wednesday announced the closure of 14 pharmacies for violations related to hiking prices of medical face masks, as the number of coronavirus victims rises in the country.

A total of 19 pharmacies have so far been shut down for raising prices, according to a statement carried by Kuwait News Agency.

The ministry’s Commercial Control and Consumer Protection Sector received 205 calls to a special hotline and inspected 187 pharmacies and made 20 seizures.

The closures were executed on instructions from the Minister of Trade and Industry Khaled Al-Roudhan who warned that more pharmacies will be closed if found to be in violation of a decision to set prices for coronavirus-related equipment at agreed levels.

The action comes as four more cases have also been reported in Kuwait – three people who had travelled from Iran and are currently under quarantine. It takes the number of cases in Kuwait up to 12.

“All patients are in stable conditions and receiving required medical care at a hospital affiliated to the ministry,” a statement from the Ministry of Health said.

Over the past two days, Kuwait, Bahrain and Oman have reported 29 cases of the novel coronavirus among people returning from pilgrimages to Iran, which is battling the deadliest outbreak outside China.

The three countries have large Shiite Muslim populations who frequently travel to Iran to visit holy shrines.

Vegan in Dubai 2020

TIME OUT SAYS

THE VEGETARIAN VIEW
Craving french toast for breakfast? How about Pad Thai for lunch? Or even meatballs for dinner? If the answer is yes to any of these then you need to order from Hippy Deli.

This plant-based takeaway has two branches, JLT and Downtown, so the delivery range is wide. Billed as offering wholesome and nutritious meals for athletes, yoga enthusiasts, busy bees and literally everyone in between, you know you can have vegan comfort food while still sticking to a healthy diet.

Hippy Deli does every meal well (don’t miss the burgers) but the stand-out dishes come from the breakfast menu. The loaded breakfast saj is a beast of a meal. Packed full of carby yumminess including tomato rice, chickpea scramble, avocado, roasted potatoes and mixed beans this saj is sure to keep you full until lunch. The side of cashew cream and homemade vegan pepper Jack cheese finish this wrap off perfectly.

Another not to be missed breakfast dish is the vegan benedict. While not akin to the original egg dish, this dish shines in its own right. Chickpea mash sits atop cauliflower patties and is topped with almond and cashew sauce and served with roasted potatoes.

If you’re after something sweeter go for the French toast – which is more like a cake – and you won’t be disappointed. It’s rich and indulgent.

Healthy carbs are a hit with us, whatever time of day.

WHAT IS IT…
An all-vegan delivery only restaurant

WHY ORDER…
Great choice of healthy yet filling dishes

VEGETARIAN-FRIENDLY
4/5

VEGAN-FRIENDLY
5/5

Jojo Rabbit

Get your cringing over with now, the guy who directed Thor: Ragnarok, New Zealand’s gifted Taika Waititi, has made a movie about an adorable Hitler Youth whose imaginary buddy is Adolf himself (Waititi plays Hitler). Honestly, the news is good, it’s high time to rethink this filmmaker from the ground up.

Breathtakingly risky but worthy under scrutiny, Jojo Rabbit dates back long before Waititi’s Marvel success, to 2012, when the circulating screenplay, an adaptation of Christine Leunens’s somber novel Caging Skies, was celebrated as brilliant but unfilmable. (Waititi’s real subject is difficult boyhood; his second feature was called Boy.)

Jojo Rabbit has a child’s perspective, that of a naive, lonely 10-year-old, Jojo (Roman Griffin Davis), who, in the voice of Waititi’s cartoonish Hitler, is the “bestest, most loyal little Nazi I’ve ever seen.” If you hope to roll with the film’s laughs, you’ll have to embrace this intentionally immature set-up, one that shows us a frenzied Jojo running down the street in his brown shirt to the German version of the Beatles’ I Want to Hold Your Hand. Otherwise, the anachronisms will play harshly. Waititi has conceived his Third Reich with deliberate broadness: There’s a strutting kids-camp counsellor (Sam Rockwell), a vicious secretary (Rebel Wilson) and a towering geek of a Gestapo agent (Stephen Merchant), all of whom nail their comic parts with po-faced perfection.

Should we be laughing at all this, though? Very rarely does Jojo Rabbit sober up and tell you not to (unlike, say, the poundingly hypocritical Life Is Beautiful), even as its ideas snowball and become bolder. In a sequence filmed like a haunted-house pursuit, Jojo discovers a teen, Elsa (Leave No Trace’s extraordinary Thomasin McKenzie, injecting a bit of sisterly teasing), living inside his home’s walls, a waif secretly harboured by his playful single mum (Scarlett Johansson).

Somehow, imperceptibly, he turns the relationship into one of endearment (Jojo grows up a little) and that’s what makes the film a keeper. In its precision, Jojo Rabbit may remind you of Wes Anderson’s The Grand Budapest Hotel, another comedy in which clownish forces of fascism square off against love, humour and elegance. Both movies feel like they come from the same universe, down to Waititi’s ear for a well-deployed pop tune. Jojo Rabbit isn’t perfect; sometimes it strains to reconcile Waititi’s more relaxed beats with his visual fussiness. But he’s legitimately breaking new ground. Hopefully, Jojo will find an audience that gets it.

Pancake Day 2020: top deals in Dubai

Pancake Day is fast approaching, and if you love the breakfast treat, we have good news for you. While it’s always a fantastic to wake up to the smell of batter, if you don’t fancy whipping them up yourself (or your pancake flipping skills aren’t up to much) on Tuesday February 25, Dubai has you covered.

Whether you’re after limited-time flavours and toppings or digging into stacks at a bargain price, you’re in the right place.

And if you fancy something else for brekkie, here are some brilliant breakfasts in Dubai you should definitely check out.

Without further ado, check out the list below and get your pancake fix.

Amongst Few
This one is for the plant-based breakfast fans in Dubai. The seriously cool café has plenty of vegan-friendly dishes, but if you’re visiting for breakfast on Pancake Day, try the banana pancakes. This stack comes sprinkled with blueberries, avocado, passionfruit and dark chocolate shavings and has a healthy dollop of vegan yoghurt to top it off. It’s so photogenic it’s hard to ruin it with the first bite, but it’s worth it.
Dhs49. Open daily 10am-10pm. Palm Strip Mall, Jumeirah Beach Road, www.amongstfew.com (04 386 9221).

Bread Street Kitchen
Gordon Ramsay’s Bread Street Kitchen at Atlantis, The Palm will be celebrating Shrove Tuesday with a menu of pancakes, along with a signature mixed drink pairing to wash it all down with.
From Dhs50. Tue Feb 25, 6pm-10.30pmAtlantis, The Palm, Palm Jumeirah, www.atlantis.com (04 426 2626).

Café Social
Why have just pancake when you can have some waffles added to your plate? Head to Café Social at Mercure Dubai Barsha Heights to take on its ‘Waffle & Pancake Parlour’.  Offering up golden waffles and a stack of mini pancakes with unlimited toppings such as strawberries, ice cream or rizzled chocolate for Dhs25. There’s also the ‘Golden Cents Mini Pancakes’ with strawberries, mixed berries and melted white amd dark chocolate sauce, along with the ‘Row-Your-Boat Waffle’, a triangular waffle topped with cream and drizzled strawberry, chocolate amd caramel.
Dhs25. Tue Feb 25, open 24 hours. Mercure Dubai Barsha Heights, Barsha Heights (04 381 8888).

Clinton St. Baking Company
The famed New York bakery in Dubai is celebrating Pancake Day with not one, but 13 different varieties throughout February. While Pancake Day 2020 might fall on Tuesday February 25, the bakery will be offering an array three-stacked pancakes on a rotating schedule – that means each one is for a limited-time only. Highlights include passion fruit and chocolate, Bavarian apple, strawberry shortbread and plenty more.
Dhs59 (stack of three). Dates vary, 8am-midnight (City Walk); Sun-Thu 10am-midnight, Fri-Sat 10am-1am (The Dubai Mall). Various locations including City Walk; The Dubai Mall, www.clintonstreetbaking.ae.

eggspectation
Buzzing breakfast spot eggspectation is combining its limited-edition pancakes together with its signature one for Dhs30. What does that mean? A huge stack of stack of red velvet, hot chocolate, and original pancakes – all in one. Come hungry for this one.
Dhs30. Tue Feb 25, times vary.Various locations including The Beach, JBR; City Walk; Matajer Mall, Sharjah, www.eggspectation.com.

Fuchsia Urban Thai
The Thai restaurant in Business Bay and Barsha Heights will be serving up their own signature take on pancakes, offering up a stack of coconut pancakes for Dhs25 throughout Pancake Day. All with an Asian twist, expect them to be sprinkled with coconut flakes with pandan custard. Yummy stuff.
Dhs25. Tue Feb 25. Open noon-11pm. Various locations including Two Towers Tecom, Barsha Heights; Bay Square, Business Bay, www.fuchsiame.com.

Mediterranean Kitchen
Mediterranean Kitchen wants to celebrate pancake day with all sorts of pancakes, boasting toffee and banana, peanut butter, brownie, lemon and sugar crepes and of course, classic style. But wait, those who get pancakes will also get a free cup of coffee to sip on. Not a bad deal.
From Dhs50. Tue Feb 25, open daily 10am-midnight. La Mer, www.medkitchen.me (04 557 8335).

Miss Tess Dubai
Miss Tess is pulling out all the stops to not just celebrate Pancake Day, but Pancake Week. Until Saturday February 29, take on all-you-can-eat traditional Asian pancakes for Dhs98. Expect Korean Buchimgae, Japanese Okonomiyaki and Thai Hoi Tod all on the menu, and be sure to take advantage of the happy hour deal drinks between 6pm and 8pm, and 11pm until 2am, where drinks are from Dhs30.
Dhs98. Until Sat Feb 29, 6pm-midnight. Taj Hotel, Business Bay, www.misstessdubai.com (050 498 8505).

Tania’s Teahouse
One of Dubai’s most Instagram-friendly cafés has added a few new dishes to its menu, but with Pancake Day fast approaching, Tania’s Teahouse has also added what they claim to be the prettiest pancake in town. For Dhs45, foodies can tuck into the lotus pancake boasting the venue’s signature buttermilk pancakes with multiple layers of lotus syrup, biscuits and whipped cream.
Dhs45. Open Sun-Wed 8am-10pm, Fri-Sat 9am-10pm. 779A Jumeirah Road, www.taniasteahouse.com (04 324 0021).

Shaikha Jawaher concludes trip to Pakistan with agreements to empower women

Dubai: Sharjah’s Women Adavcement Establishment (NAMA) and UNHCR has signed an agreement to offer sustainable income to female Afghani artisans in refugees camps in Pakistan.

Sheikha Jawaher Bint Mohammed Al Qasimi, Wife of His Highness the Ruler of Sharjah, Chairperson of NAMA and UNHCR Eminent Advocate for Refugee Children, has concluded a comprehensive visit to Pakistan. The visit entailed meetings with several entities and institutions in major cities of Islamabad and Lahore, and identifying sectors that will benefit from NAMA’s expertise in women’s capacity-building and enabling them access to sustainable sources of income.

NAMA is a Sharjah-based public non-profit organisation that believes that women are important human capital and works towards advancing them.

A key highlight of Sheikha Jawaher Al Qasimi’s visit was her witnessing the signing of a partnership agreement between NAMA and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), which will offer sustainable income to female Afghani carpet weavers in the city of Quetta in Balochistan, which hosts the second-highest percentage of Afghan refugees.

The agreement signing led by Reem BinKaram, Director of NAMA and Ruvendrini Menikdiwela, UNHCR’s representative in Pakistan, in the presence of Hamad Obaid Al Zaabi, UAE Ambassador to Pakistan.

Under the terms of this partnership agreement, a one-year crafts-led project will be led by Irthi Contemporary Crafts Council (Irthi), an affiliate of NAMA, in collaboration with UNHCR to benefit 100 women — including 70 Afghani women refugees and 30 women from the host community of Quetta, who will be commissioned by Irthi to create carpets bearing motifs that reflect the richness and diversity of Emirati culture and heritage. The designs will be exclusive to Irthi.

Pakistan hosts more than 1.4 million registered Afghans who have been forced to flee their homes, of which 68 per cent are women. Among these women, around 22 per cent fall in the 18 — 59 years age category.

“In these numbers, Sharjah and NAMA identified a pressing need for vocational training, livelihood creation and socioeconomic empowerment,” Sheikha Jawaher noted, adding, “Even as the global humanitarian crisis touches an unprecedented extreme, I believe there is something each of us can do, especially with regard to women as, world over, they are disproportionately affected by war, crisis and displacement.”

This six-day visit to Pakistan is reflective of Sheikha Jawaher’s unparalleled promptness in acting on the pledge His Highness Dr Sheikh Sultan bin Muhammad Al Qasimi, Supreme Council Member and Ruler of Sharjah, took last December at the Women’s Economic Empowerment Global Summit 2019, asserting he would, “personally support programmes and efforts to empower women around the world, particularly in Africa, Asia and Latin America”.

Sheikha Jawaher said: “At NAMA Women Advancement Establishment, all our efforts are geared towards the creation of an equitable world for women. True human empowerment is achieved when our willingness to uplift those in need is not perceived as a choice, but practised as a way of life. This is what Pakistan has done for the past 40 years with regards to offering asylum to Afghan refugees. We cannot be reluctant in our response to assisting nations who have been facing the challenges and consequences large-scale humanitarian crises, such as Pakistan.”

Irthi conducted a feasibility study in the lead up to the signing to determine ways to achieve maximum impact from the project, and a framework for implementation was agreed upon by both entities.

100 women support

“With 100 women and their families who will be benefited by this programme, NAMA seeks to expand the outreach of its sustainable solutions designed and implemented to make women self-reliant and gain permanent livelihood opportunities. With such targeted programmes, we will continue building the resilience of women living in the most challenging of circumstances and advance their role as key human resources,” she added.