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  • 26
    Mar
    2013
    8:52am, EDT

    A diplomatic star is born as Chinese first lady dazzles on first foreign tour

    Thomas Mukoya / Reuters

    Chinese President Xi Jinping and First Lady Peng Liyuan bid farewell as they board their plane to depart from the Julius Nyerere International Airport in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, on March 25, 2013.

    Ivan Sekretarev / AP

    Glamorous first lady Peng Liyuan has emerged as a Chinese diplomatic star, charming audiences and cutting a distinct profile from her all-but-invisible predecessors on her debut official trip abroad.

    Peng was featured prominently in Chinese media coverage of her husband President Xi Jinping's state visit to Russia, the start of a trip that has also seen stops in Tanzania and South Africa.

    Much of the coverage focused on her personal style, with a report on the mass-market sina.com website noting with satisfaction that the black leather clutch she paired with one outfit was made to order by a Chinese firm in the southwestern city of Chengdu, a flattering contrast with prominent Chinese female politicians scorned publicly for appearing decked head to toe in foreign designer brands.

    -- The Associated Press

    Thomas Mukoya / Reuters

    Peng Liyuan looks at a traditional Tanzanian entertainer during the welcoming ceremony upon her arrival in Dar es Salaam on March 24, 2013.

    EPA

    Peng Liyuan observes a moment of silence during a visit to Gongo la Mboto cemetery, where Chinese workers who died while constructing a railway are buried, on the outskirts of Dar es Salaam on March 25, 2013.

    Siphiwe Sibeko / Reuters

    South Africa's President Jacob Zuma shares a joke with Peng Liyuan during an official lunch hosted by Zuma and his wife in Pretoria on March 26, 2013.

    Glamorous and stylish, Peng Liyuan, China's First Lady, has been projecting a newly fashionable face of the Communist regime as she accompanies her husband, the new Chinese President Xi Jinping, on a tour of Russia and Africa – Channel Four's  Lindsey Hilsum reports.

    Related:

    Sign here, Mr. President: China's Xi completes rise to the top

    China's president-in-waiting Xi Jinping returns to Iowa

    More news from China on NBC's Behind the Wall

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    17 comments

    Here's a thought. Why don't you and the first lady go to North Korea and shut that fat little pig up before he gets roasted?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: china, fashion, diplomacy, world-news, featured, xi-jinping, peng-liyuan
  • Updated
    22
    Feb
    2013
    1:35pm, EST

    Official: Wreckage may be plane carrying fashion icon Vittorio Missoni

    Daniel Dal Zennaro / EPA, file

    Italian fashion scion Vittorio Missoni is shown in a 2009 photo from Milan, Italy. The chief of the Missoni fashion house has been missing along with five others since Jan. 4, when his plane vanished after taking off from the Los Roques resort area en route to Caracas.

    By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Wreckage that may be remains of the missing plane carrying Italian fashion executive Vittorio Missoni and five others has been found on an island off the coast of Venezuela, an Italian official said Friday.

    "I can confirm that the wreckage of an airplane has been found off the coast, but we don't know yet whether this was the same airplane that was carrying Mr. Missoni," an Italian Foreign Ministry spokesman said.

    The wreckage was spotted along a rough stretch of unpopulated coast on the north side of the island of Curacao, said Norman Serphos, spokesman for the Curacao Public Prosecutor's Office. Because of rugged terrain and strong currents offshore, the island's coast guard was called in to assist with the recovery, which was completed Thursday afternoon, he said.

    In the past two weeks, bags belonging to Missoni have been found on the same north coast of Curacao as well as on the neighboring island of Bonaire, Serphos said.

    Venezuelan Government / AP, file

    Venezuela National Civil Aviation Institute search Jan. 9 for a plane that went missing near Los Roques, Venezuela, five days earlier carrying Vittorio Missoni, his wife and four others. Wreckage has been found, but it was unclear early Friday whether it was that of the Missoni's plane.

    He said the material recovered Thursday was in the early stages of scrutiny, and he was cautious about saying whether what was found was indeed part of an aircraft.

    "There is an investigation going on to determine with experts what kind of material it is," Serphos said. "Even if it is from an airplane, then you still have to determine if it's from that aircraft that Mr. Missoni was on. We have a lot of things to do, probably [talk to] the maker of the airplane, the owner of the airplane and [check] the registration. A lot of things have to be confirmed. ... The minute that it's determined that it's an airplane, then the department of aviation will be involved."

    The plane carrying the 58-year-old head of the major fashion house, his wife, Maurizia Castiglioni, two Italian friends and two Venezuelan pilots has been missing since Jan. 4, when it took off from the resort area of Los Roques on its way to the Venezuelan capital, Caracas.

    Minutes after the plane took off, it disappeared from radar.

    The Italian Foreign Ministry spokesman said more information about the wreckage was being eagerly awaited in Italy, where the Missoni name is iconic.

    "We got the news early this morning from our embassy there [in Venezuela]," he said. "The investigations are ongoing. We are checking whether this was the plane."

    The Missoni family has asked for privacy and the company has not issued a statement since Jan. 7, when Angela Missoni, sister of Vittorio, said the family was "moved by the affection and help we've had so far from the whole world and thankful to the authorities for their tireless search and rescue efforts."

    "We will not give up," Angela Missoni said in the statement.

    This story was originally published on Fri Feb 22, 2013 8:07 AM EST

    36 comments

    Enjoy every day, life is short .

    Show more
    Explore related topics: italy, venezuela, fashion, plane, featured, wreckage, curacao, updated, missoni
  • 6
    Nov
    2012
    6:52am, EST

    Report: Italian castle seized in tax probe involving sale of Hugo Boss

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    MILAN, Italy – Police in Italy have seized assets worth $83.5 million - including a 15th century castle - in a tax probe involving the sale of fashion houses Hugo Boss and Valentino in 2007, according to reports.

    Italy's tax police said on Monday they had confiscated real estate, land and corporate holdings of 13 people "linked to one of Italy's most important families in the fashion and textile sector."

    A person familiar with the investigation told Reuters the 13 people in question were linked to the Marzotto group, and included members of the Marzotto family.

    Marzotto sold Valentino Fashion Group - then including both the Valentino label and Hugo Boss - to private finance group Permira in 2007 in a deal worth $6.8 billion. Those under investigation are suspected of not having filed tax returns.

    The Financial Times of London reported that the seized assets included apartments in Milan and Rome, a 25-room villa in Alpine resort Cortina d’Ampezzo and land. It said a 50-room castle, Villa Trissino Marzotto, near the town of Vicenza, was also seized.

    'Totally groundless'
    The Italian government has set fighting chronic tax evasion as one of its priorities as it seeks to come to grips with the country's towering debt crisis and find resources to fund growth.

    Lawyers representing the Marzotto family said the decision taken by Milan prosecutors ordering the seizure was "totally groundless".

    The lawyers said bank documents showed capital gains from the operation had been declared and taxed.

    "I acknowledge the seizure measures. I think it right only to point out that I did not have any operative position in the company in which I was minority partner," Matteo Marzotto, a board member of the textile family group, said in a statement.

    The technocrat government of Prime Minister Mario Monti has described the fight against tax evasion as a state of war and has stepped up monitoring and collection efforts.

    Damir Sagolj / Reuters

    Italy's Prime Minister Mario Monti arrives for a session at the Asia-Europe Meeting summit in Vientiane, Laos, on Monday.

    Earlier this year the head of Italy's Inland Revenue service, Attilio Befera, said tax evasion totaled about $150 billion.

    A spokesperson for the Marzotto Group declined to comment, saying the news did not involve the company or any of its units.

    Police said in a statement the probe revealed that a Luxembourg-based holding company used by the Marzotto Group in the sale made a capital gain of nearly 200 million euros, resulting in tax evasion of 65 million euros.

    "The investigation... revealed that a financial holding company purposefully created in Luxembourg was instead administered from Italy," the police said.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    11 comments

    Sounds like the business was sold by a company from Luxembourg not Italy???

    Show more
    Explore related topics: business, italy, europe, world, tax, fashion, crime, valentino, featured, hugo-boss
  • 26
    Sep
    2012
    11:30pm, EDT

    Philippines city restores Imelda Marcos' shoe collection after flood damage

    Ted Aljibe / AFP - Getty Images

    A museum employee displays some of the shoes of former Philippine first lady Imelda Marcos, next to her portrait at the shoe museum in Manila on Wednesday.

    Romeo Ranoco / Reuters

    Workers do minor repairs on shoes belonging to former Philippine First Lady Imelda Marcos in a shoe factory in Marikina city, east of Manila on Wednesday, Sept. 26, 2012. The shoes, which were part of a display at the Marikina Shoe Museum, were repaired by the city government of Marikina, shoe capital of the Philippines, after they were damaged by floods brought by southwest monsoon rains last month.

    Read more: Neglect ruins Imelda Marcos' vast shoe collection

    Romeo Ranoco / Reuters

    A volunteer cleans shoes of former Philippine First Lady Imelda Marcos on display on Wednesday.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

    6 comments

    they should auction the shoes off and give the money to families who lost their homes in the flood.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: philippines, asia, fashion, shoes, world-news, imelda-marcos
  • 10
    Sep
    2012
    2:22pm, EDT

    'It's a dream': From orphanage to runway, model walks at Fashion Week

    Bennett Raglin / Getty Images

    Fior Mendez, an orphan from the Dominican Republic, wears Nzinga Knight as she walks the runway on Friday, Sept. 7, at the fifth annual Harlem's Fashion Row show during New York Fashion Week.

    By Danika Fears, TODAY

    Just two months ago, Fior Mendez lived in an orphanage in the Dominican Republic, keeping close watch over her surrogate brothers and sisters. Despite her hardships, she always told friends that one day she would be a runway model, just like the young women on television whom they admired.

    Now, she's made that dream a reality, having walked the runway on Friday night at Lincoln Center for New York Fashion Week. 

    Speaking to TODAY.com with a translator’s help, Mendez choked up with tears when she described the astonishing changes her life has undergone in just a few short weeks.

    “I’m overwhelmed emotionally, it’s a dream,” said the 22-year-old, who is surprisingly well-versed in fashion lingo and hopes to one day walk for Chanel. “I couldn’t imagine that a person like me would be doing this in New York City.”

    At 21, Mendez became too old to remain at the orphanage any longer, but a good friend of the organization's founder, Sonia Hane, invited the aspiring model to come live with her in New York City to learn English. That led to a meeting with a casting agent, and an opportunity to walk the runway during New York Fashion Week for Nzinga Knight, an American Muslim designer with a Caribbean background.

    Orphaned Starfish Foundation

    Fior Mendez (in yellow) as a teenager with her friends at the Orfanato Ninos de Cristo orphanage in La Romana, Domincan Republican.

    Knight didn’t even know about Mendez’s unusual history when she hired her to wear her designs at the fifth annual Harlem’s Fashion Row show. 

    "Just as my third casting session was about to be over, Fior Mendez walked in the room and did her walk and had this wonderful expression on her face, plus natural beauty," Knight told TODAY.com. "I was sold."

    Knight later learned that the early years of Mendez's life were fraught with homelessness and uncertainty. Mendez moved often with her mother and four siblings, and they rarely knew where the next meal would come from.

    When Mendez was 13, her mother decided she could no longer take care of all her children. She left the girl at Orfanato Niños de Cristo orphanage in the town of La Romana. Since then, Mendez has had no contact with her family. 

    But she says she found a family of a different kind in the orphanage, where she spent eight years of her life. There she became part of a community and established herself as a “quiet leader,” quickly becoming the right-hand woman of Hane, the orphanage’s founder. 

    Orphaned Starfish Foundation

    Fior Mendez (right) in her school uniform as a child at the orphanage.

    “I was very scared before,” Mendez said. “I had no one place to live, so every night I went to sleep scared and didn’t know if I would get a meal.”

    Female orphans in Latin America often fall into prostitution or remain in poverty, but she started going to school at the orphanage and received computer training, said Andy Stein, who got to know Mendez when his nonprofit, The Orphaned Starfish Foundation, built a computer center for Orfanato Niños de Cristo. 

    “She is an incredibly kind soul,” Stein told TODAY.com. “What you’ll always see on her face is a massive smile.”

    Before her slender 5-foot-10-inch build became an asset on the catwalk, she used it to her benefit to play volleyball at the orphanage. But modeling was an early — and enduring — obsession, one she picked up from the many modeling shows broadcast in the Dominican Republic. As a lanky teenager, Mendez would practice poses in the mirror. 

    Orphaned Starfish Foundation

    This is the orphanage where Fior Mendez, 22, grew up.

    With a support system, including Stein and his foundation, the transition wasn’t as difficult as it could have been for an orphan heading to the big city without a command of English. Stein’s girlfriend introduced Mendez to Prince Riley, the founder of boutique modeling firm Signature Talent Agency. Riley immediately signed the “natural poser” and sent her out on casting calls.

    “Every casting I’ve sent her on she’s booked,” he told TODAY.com. “The fashion industry is definitely embracing her.”

    Though she plans to continue sashaying down the runway, she also hopes to inspire orphaned and homeless children back in the Dominican Republic. In the future she’d like to study communications and become a newscaster or spokesperson.

    “I want to help homeless children have a voice,” she said.

    For now, Mendez is soaking in the scene of Fashion Week, keeping up with her English classes and learning how to navigate New York City. Her thoughts, however, are never far from the orphanage she called home for many years, and the children who made up her surrogate family.

    “I want to be a light for those kids,” she said. “I want to show them that if you are dedicated, you can do something, and that even if you’re sad, you always have hope.”

    More:

    Off the runway: Victoria Beckham with her head in a bag, fierce manicures and more
    Fashion Week kicks off in New York
    Slideshow: Celebs celebrate Fashion Week

    88 comments

    More power to her, but I just don't get these "skinny" models that all look alike... It would be nice to see companies get "real" girls modeling clothing... same for young women.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: new-york, fashion, model, featured, fashion-week-spring-2013
  • 13
    Jun
    2012
    11:03am, EDT

    Russian ex-spy Anna Chapman disarms the fashion runway

    AP

    Russian ex-spy Anna Chapman, center, walks a Turkish catwalk flanked by two men posing as secret agents at a fashion show in Antalya, Turkey.

    By Rina Raphael, TODAY

    Anna Chapman, 30, the infamous Russian ex-spy deported from the U.S., sure has a sense of humor: On June 8, the foreign beauty was spotted strutting on a Turkish catwalk, escorted by two men dressed as secret agents.

    Clad in a stunning red-and-black print gown at the Dosso Dossi show, the redheaded celebrity looked quite the James Bond character. Her payment? The clothing line's owner, Hikmet Eraslan, said he donated to Chapman's charity foundation for children with poor eyesight.

    AP

    High profile: Russian ex-spy Anna Chapman, seen here on June 8, also walked the runway during Moscow Fashion Week.

    Chapman certainly hasn't stayed undercover since being deported in 2010 along with 9 other agents. She's been enjoying her celebrity status — modeling, hosting a weekly TV show in Russia, editing a business magazine, posing in lingerie for Maxim magazine (naturally), and even dedicating her time to a youth charity organization.

    More: H&M's newest collaboration? The kooky Maison Martin Margiela
    Teen makes graduation dress from old math homework
    Video: Warm weather style: 5 must-haves for summer

    Surveillance videos released by the FBI feature undercover Russian spies, like Anna Chapman, being investigated before being deported back to Russia. NBC's Michelle Kosinski reports.

    116 comments

    She can steal all the secrets she wants from me!!!!!!!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: fashion, celebrity, news, designer
  • 14
    Mar
    2012
    8:39pm, EDT

    Heaven scent: Pope orders eau de cologne that he alone may wear

    Vincenzo Pinto / Pool via Reuters

    Pope Benedict XVI, whose red loafers attracted attention from the fashion world, has commissioned his own eau de cologne.

    By msnbc.com staff

    At 84, Pope Benedict XVI has proven to be a spiffy dresser. He wears cherry red loafers that landed him in the pages of Esquire magazine as the “accessorizer of the year,” he’s been spotted wearing sunglasses by Gucci and been outfitted by the Italian fashion house, Belstaff. Now, according to the Guardian, il Papa has commissioned his own brand of eau de cologne, a scent that only he may wear.

    The fragrance is a combination of lime tree, verbena and grass and was created by Silvana Casoli, an Italian nose, as perfume makers are called, who has created scents for Sarah Jessica Parker, Katy Perry, Madonna and Sting.

    Casoli also made scents for priests who embarked on the pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela in Spain – the perfumes, named Water of Faith and Water of Hope, were so beloved by the pilgrims that they presented samples to their pope, the Guardian reported.


    Casoli made a secret pact with the pope and refused to release further details about the ingredients but she did reveal that as she tried to come up with the perfect concoction, she thought of nature and the pope’s love of the forests.

    "I realized that an essence like this had to have at its core something pure and clean, recalling the idea of peace," Casoli told Il Messagero newspaper. "I thought of the smells the Pope would smell when praying at the Grotto of Lourdes."

    She did not, however, divulge what the cologne would be called.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    85 comments

    So it's sinful for women to use birth control, but the church can spend money for a man's vanity??? Jesus wept.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: fashion, pope, perfume

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