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Cosmobeauté Malaysia and beautyexpo will expand into East Malaysia with the launch of the Cosmobeauté Malaysia Borneo Festival 2026 at the Sabah International Convention Centre (SICC) from May 25 to 26.
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Gosper
Gosper, 61, said hopefully the sport can survive, providing things return to some form of normality next year. “We’re operating a little bit as a central bank, trying to advance monies to these unions to see them through from a cash-flow point of view,” he said. “We have earmarked around $100 million. We are distributing that to around 30 unions in six regions. “It is the higher revenue unions that are most in trouble, in terms of the holes being created. “Hopefully we can see this through if things start to get back to normality, whatever that is, halfway through next year.” “It’s putting huge pressure on unions and they all are in different shape in terms of their own reserves, their own outlook and revenue mix and so on.” Gosper, a former advertising executive who joined World Rugby in 2012, said the distribution of the funds was decided by an arbitration process. “We are contributing to about 30 unions, in particular 20, and probably the majority does go to the top 10 union because it’s where the majority of the revenue is,” he said. “They generate a lot of the revenue for other unions, whether it comes from World Cups or elsewhere.” Gosper says World Rugby too has had to cut its cloth. “We are very fortunate...we have got a Rugby World Cup (in Japan) away just in time and our next World Cup is now three years away and it will be a bumper World Cup in revenue terms,” he said. “So we can be relatively optimistic. We have taken our own precautions, changed our forecasting, cut budgets significantly.” “If we spend £600 million over a four-year period, we have cut at least 10 percent of that budget and found those savings and those savings find themselves helping the unions.”





