Leaders and blue bloods descend on Brunei for royal wedding climax

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Prince Abdul Mateen and Yang Mulia Anisha Rosnah sit during their wedding reception. (AFP)
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The portraits of groom Prince Abdul Mateen and his bride Yanh Mulia Anisha Rosnah are seen on a billboard ahead of their wedding procession in Bandar Seri Begawan on January 13, 2024. (AFP)
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Prince Abdul Mateen (R) touching his forehead on the hand of his father, Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah (2nd L) after his solemnization at Sultan Omar Ali Saifuddien Mosque in Bandar Seri Begawan on January 11, 2024. (Brunei's Information Department via Reuters)
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Brunei's Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah pours scented oil on the hands of Prince Abdul Mateen's bride Yang Mulia Anisha Rosnah during the royal powdering ceremony at Istana Nurul Iman in Bandar Seri Begawan. (Brunei's Information Department via AP)
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Brunei's Prince Abdul Mateen sign documents after his solemnization at Sultan Omar Ali Saifuddien Mosque in Bandar Seri Begawan on January 11, 2024. (Brunei's Information Department via Reuters)
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Updated 14 January 2024
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Leaders and blue bloods descend on Brunei for royal wedding climax

  • Mateen, 32, tied the knot on January 11 with Yang Mulia Anisha Rosnah, 29, who is from a prominent family in Brunei
  • Mateen’s father is Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah, the world’s longest reigning monarch and once the richest man on the planet

BANDAR SERI BEGAWAN, Brunei: Lavish celebrations for the wedding of Brunei’s Prince Abdul Mateen and his wife will climax Sunday with a glittering ceremony attended by government leaders and blue-blooded guests from around the world.

Mateen, 32, and Yang Mulia Anisha Rosnah, 29, will make their first public appearance as a married couple in a procession through the normally sleepy capital Bandar Seri Begawan that is expected to draw thousands of onlookers.
The popular prince was Asia’s most eligible bachelor until Thursday when he tied the knot with Anisha Rosnah, who is from a prominent family in Brunei.




Prince Abdul Mateen and Yang Mulia Anisha Rosnah walk down the aisle during their wedding reception at Istana Nurul Iman in Brunei's capital. (AFP)

Mateen’s father is Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah, the world’s longest reigning monarch and once the richest man on the planet.

The sultan’s palace has not yet unveiled the guest list for Sunday, but royals from Asia, Europe and the Middle East have previously joined royal wedding celebrations in the energy-rich nation.
Neighboring Malaysia’s Sultan Abdullah Shah has said he would be there.


Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim, Indonesian President Joko Widodo and Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong attended. .

Sunday’s celebration is the highlight of 10 days of pomp and pageantry in the tiny country whose extreme wealth is derived almost entirely from its enormous oil and gas reserves.




Prince Abdul Mateen and Yang Mulia Anisha Rosnah wave from their car during the wedding procession in Brunei's capital Bandar Seri Begawan. (AFP)


Mateen, a British-trained military officer in Brunei’s armed forces and a helicopter pilot, held court with his wife at an elaborate ceremony at the sprawling Istana Nurul Iman palace, with invited guests in attendance.
The ceremony is steeped in tradition drawn from Brunei’s centuries-old history as an Islamic monarchy.
“Once seated, the ceremony was completed with a prayer read by designated religious officials,” the information office said.




People arrive ahead of the wedding procession of Prince Abdul Mateen and Yanh Mulia Anisha Rosnah in Brunei's capital on January 14, 2024. (AFP)

The couple will then lead a grand parade that will weave through the capital where their images have been displayed on street arches and building facades for days.
Thousands of the sultan’s subjects are expected to line the streets to catch a glimpse of the couple.
“I’m very excited. This is a once-in-a-lifetime moment,” said school teacher Norliha Mohamad Din, 37, who plans to be among the spectators.
“I have seen Prince Mateen since he was small. I’m very happy for him. This is one way of showing appreciation to the royal family.”




Women get free ice cream ahead of the wedding procession of Prince Abdul Mateen and Yanh Mulia Anisha Rosnah in Brunei's capital Bandar Seri Begawan on January 14, 2024. (AFP)

As the 10th child and fourth son of the sultan, Mateen is unlikely to ever ascend the throne.
But he appears to have taken on the unofficial role of presenting a modern face for the royal family in a bid to connect with a younger generation of Bruneians raised on social media.
Mateen’s matinee idol looks and well-chiselled body have earned him a massive following on Instagram where carefully curated photos and videos show him playing polo, dabbling in photography and posing in military uniform.
 


US happiness sinks as more Americans eat alone: survey

Updated 20 March 2025
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US happiness sinks as more Americans eat alone: survey

  • Finland ranked as the world’s happiest country for the eighth straight year in the World Happiness Report
  • The United States fell to 24th place, its lowest score since the report was first published in 2012

HELSINKI: The United States fell to its lowest happiness ranking ever partly due to a rise in the number of Americans eating their meals alone, an annual UN-sponsored report said Thursday.
Finland ranked as the world’s happiest country for the eighth straight year in the World Happiness Report, with locals and experts thanking its grand lakes and strong welfare system for boosting its mood.
Afghanistan, plagued by a humanitarian catastrophe since the Taliban regained control in 2020, once again ranked as the unhappiest country in the world.
The United States fell to 24th place, its lowest score since the report was first published in 2012, when it recorded its highest showing at number 11.
“The number of people dining alone in the United States has increased 53 percent over the past two decades,” the authors said, noting that sharing meals “is strongly linked with well-being.”
In 2023, roughly one in four Americans reported eating all their meals alone the previous day, the report said.
“The increasing number of people who eat alone is one reason for declining well-being in the United States,” it said.
It also noted that the United States was one of few countries to see a rise of so-called “deaths of despair” – from suicide or substance abuse – at a time when those deaths are declining in a majority of countries.
The report surveyed people worldwide in 2022-2024, before US President Donald Trump’s shakeup of national and global affairs since returning to the White House in January.
Nordic countries all stayed among the 10 happiest, with Denmark, Iceland and Sweden trailing Finland, which slightly extended its lead over runner-up Denmark.
Meanwhile, Costa Rica and Mexico entered the top 10 for the first time, at the sixth and 10th spot respectively.
The happiness ranking is based on a three-year average of individuals’ self-assessed evaluations of life satisfaction, as well as GDP per capita, social support, healthy life expectancy, freedom, generosity and corruption.
“It seems that Finnish people are relatively satisfied with their lives,” Frank Martela, an assistant professor specialized in well-being and happiness research at Aalto University, said.
It could largely be explained by Finns living in “quite a well-functioning society,” he said.
“Democracy is functioning well, we have free elections, free speech, low levels of corruption and all of these have shown to predict higher levels of national well-being,” Martela said.
He added that the Nordic countries also all have relatively strong welfare systems – with parental leave, unemployment benefits and mostly universal health care – which also contribute to higher levels of well-being on average.
Eveliina Ylitolonen, a 23-year-old student in Helsinki, said she believed that Finns’ focus on enjoying beautiful nature could help explain the consistently high level of happiness in the Nordic country, known for its deep forests and over 160,000 lakes.
“Nature is an important part of this happiness,” Ylitolonen said.
Jamie Sarja-Lambert, a professional video gamer who moved to Finland from the United Kingdom, agreed.
“Seems like everyone is a lot more in touch with nature, going outside and socializing, more of a community,” he said.
This year, the authors of the happiness report said new evidence indicates that engaging in acts of generosity and believing in the kindness of others are “significant predictors of happiness, even more so than earning a higher salary.”
They also noted that in general “people are too pessimistic about the kindness of their communities,” and that “the return rate of lost wallets is much higher than people expect.”
Nordic countries also “rank among the top places for expected and actual return of lost wallets.”


US music industry posts 100 million paid streaming users

Updated 18 March 2025
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US music industry posts 100 million paid streaming users

  • The US music industry passed 100 million paid streaming subscriptions for the first time in 2024
  • For the third year in a row, vinyl albums outsold compact discs, selling 44 million versus 33 million respectively

NEW YORK: The US music industry passed 100 million paid streaming subscriptions for the first time in 2024, according to the latest report from the Recording Industry Association of America released Tuesday.
The US industry’s total revenue last year increased three percent to $17.7 billion retail, the report said, up half a billion dollars from 2023.
Paid subscription services accounted for 79 percent of streaming revenues, and almost two-thirds of total revenues.
Yet streaming growth has slowed over the past five years — in 2024, it increased by less than four million subscriptions, compared to the jump from 2020 to 2021, when it spiked by almost nine million — a trend that has pushed music companies to seek growth elsewhere.
Universal, for example, has been touting a “Streaming 2.0” vision focusing on avenues like selling products to superfans.
Music revenues meanwhile fell two percent to $1.8 billion on ad-supported, on-demand services — examples include YouTube, Facebook and Spotify’s ad-supported version.
Indie darling vinyl posted its 18th straight year of growth, and accounts for nearly 75 percent of physical format revenues that total $2 billion, the RIAA said.
For the third year in a row, vinyl albums outsold compact discs, selling 44 million versus 33 million respectively.
Vinyl’s popularity has grown steadily in recent years, fueled by collectors and fans nostalgic for the warm crackle that emanates from Side A and Side B.
The annual report from the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry, which represents global record companies, is due on Wednesday.


Hungarian woman who kept over 100 cats in squalor jailed for animal cruelty

Updated 18 March 2025
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Hungarian woman who kept over 100 cats in squalor jailed for animal cruelty

  • The woman in her sixties was found guilty of causing “prolonged suffering to a large number of animals” by neglecting them, the court said
  • The defendant failed to provide adequate food or water to the animals while keeping them locked up in her “faeces-contaminated flat“

BUDAPEST: A Hungarian woman who kept more than 100 malnourished cats and a dog in squalid conditions in her flat was sentenced to 10 months in prison for animal cruelty, a Budapest court said Tuesday.
The case sparked public outcry and is thought to be among the Central European country’s most serious animal abuse cases in recent years, local media reported.
The woman in her sixties was found guilty of causing “prolonged suffering to a large number of animals” by neglecting them, the court said in a statement.
The defendant — who did not show any remorse — failed to provide adequate food or water to the animals while keeping them locked up in her “faeces-contaminated flat.”
As a result of the neglect, the animals “suffered from external and internal parasitic diseases” and were deprived of “self-sufficiency,” it added.
The woman — who resisted arrest in 2019 and was taken into psychiatric care — has consistently denied neglecting the cats during the trial, and stressed she had helped a lot of animals in the past, independent news site Telex reported.
But some cats died in the flat and surviving animals had to be put down after being rescued due to suffering from a number of diseases, the article stated.
The case became public in Hungary after an animal welfare organization, Helping Angels — which assisted in rescuing the animals — shared photos on Facebook showing the flat’s filthy conditions.
Both the prosecution and the defense have appealed the ruling.


“Champions” Queen win 2025 Polar Music Prize, Hancock and Hannigan also honored

Updated 18 March 2025
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“Champions” Queen win 2025 Polar Music Prize, Hancock and Hannigan also honored

  • “Champions” Queen win 2025 Polar Music Prize, Hancock and Hannigan also honored

STOCKHOLM: British rock band Queen, American jazz pianist Herbie Hancock and Canadian soprano and conductor Barbara Hannigan were awarded the 2025 Polar Music Prize on Tuesday.
The Polar Prize hailed Queen for their “distinctive and instantly recognizable sound that no one else can emulate.”
“Queen were not exaggerating when they sang ‘We are the Champions’,” it said in a statement.
Queen have sold more than 300 million albums featuring songs such as “We Will Rock You,” “Another One Bites The Dust” and “Bohemian Rhapsody.”
Founded in 1970, the band featured flamboyant frontman Freddie Mercury, guitarist Brian May, drummer Roger Taylor and bass player John Deacon. They played stadiums across the world — including a memorable performance at the Live Aid concert in 1985 — before Mercury’s death in 1991.
They relaunched in 2004 with a succession of new singers.
Queen share the prize with American jazz pianist Herbie Hanckock, a collaborator of Miles Davies among others as well as a solo star in his own right, and Canadian soprano and conductor Barbara Hannigan.
Founded in 1989 by Stig Anderson, publisher and manager of the Swedish band ABBA, previous winners include Paul McCartney, Bob Dylan, Patti Smith, Sting, Elton John and Metallica.


Nine-year-old Thai tattooist makes his mark

Updated 17 March 2025
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Nine-year-old Thai tattooist makes his mark

  • Tattooing is a centuries-old tradition in Thailand
  • Knight was one of nearly 200 artists at the Thailand Tattoo Expo

Bangkok: Wielding a cumbersome tattoo gun with his small hands swamped in surgical gloves, nine-year-old Napat Mitmakorn expertly inks the pattern of a fanged serpent on a man’s upper thigh.
“I want to be a tattoo artist and open my own tattoo palour,” he told AFP in his booth at a Bangkok tattoo expo, where fascinated attendees paused to film his work. “I like art so I like to tattoo.”
Tattooing is a centuries-old tradition in Thailand, where tattoo parlours are omnipresent and offer designs ranging from the ancient and spiritual to the modern and profane.
Napat’s father Nattawut Sangtong said he introduced his son — who goes by the nickname “Knight” — to the craft of tattooing to swerve the pitfalls of contemporary childhood.
“I just wanted to keep him away from his phone because he was addicted to gaming and had a short attention span,” said the 38-year-old, also an amateur tattooist, who works at a block printing factory.
The father-son duo together learned from TikTok tutorials and practiced on paper before graduating to artificial leather simulating human skin, and then the real thing.
Knight said he swiftly picked up the skills because art is his favorite school subject. Recognizing his son’s talent, Nattawut now coaches him in two-hour sessions three days a week.
“It’s not just tattooing, it’s like meditation,” Nattawut said.
The pair run a TikTok channel together — “The Tattoo Artist with Milk Teeth” — where they livestream Knight’s sessions and sometimes draw hundreds of thousands of viewers with a single clip.
His Saturday session at the Thailand Tattoo Expo was his public debut, as he tattooed his uncle for a second time — marking him with an eight-inch (20 centimeter) mythical Naga serpent.
Unfazed by the techno music blaring from massive speakers, Knight predicts the creature from Hindu and Thai folklore will take 12 hours to complete.
For now, his father insists he only works on family and friends — opening up to public clients would require more rigorous hygiene training.
But Naruebet Chonlatachaisit, Knight’s uncle, is relaxed as the tattoo takes shape on his left leg. “I trust him, and I think he’ll only improve,” he says.
Knight was one of nearly 200 artists at the Thailand Tattoo Expo — but drew outsized attention among the crowds of thousands of visitors this weekend.
Office worker Napat Muangsawang stopped by the boy’s booth to admire his meticulous artistry.
“It’s quite amazing. Tattooing isn’t easy,” he said. “It’s not like drawing on a paper where you can just erase it.”