Wednesday, 3 September 2014

African Countries With The Most Beautiful Women

  1. 21
    Up118
    Down205
    Libya
  2. 22
    Up77
    Down128
    Mali
  3. 23
    Up68
    Down115
    Madagascar
  4. 24
    Up80
    Down153
    Nigeria
  5. 25
    Up82
    Down158
    South Africa
  6. 26
    Up63
    Down123
    Uganda
  7. 27
    Up50
    Down96
    Guinea
  8. 28
    Up46
    Down92
    Zimbabwe
  9. 29
    Up76
    Down162
    Angola
  10. 30
    Up51
    Down108
    Comoros
  11. 31
    Up56
    Down122
    Sierra Leone
  12. 32
    Up39
    Down85
    new!Gabon
  13. 33
    Up44
    Down98
    Chad
  14. 34
    Up49
    Down110
    Ivory Coast
  15. 35
    Up35
    Down79
    Benin
  16. 36
    Up46
    Down108
    Cameroon
  17. 37
    Up33
    Down79
    Niger
  18. 38
    Up32
    Down79
    São Tomé and Príncipe
  19. 39
    Up49
    Down119
    Liberia
  20. 40
    Up36
    Down89
    Namibia
  21. 41
    Up35
    Down90
    Togo
  22. 42
    Up34
    Down88
    Zambia
  23. 43
    Up35
    Down95
    Gambia
  24. 44
    Up30
    Down83
    Malawi
  25. 45
    Up33
    Down91
    Mozambique
  26. 46
    Up34
    Down95
    Burkina Faso
  27. 47
    Up40
    Down111
    Democratic Republic of the Congo
  28. 48
    Up27
    Down80
    Equatorial Guinea
  29. 49
    Up23
    Down72
  30. 50
    Up24
    Down77
    Swaziland

Trends and Market Analysis of Aircraft Values

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Miracle-performing baby attracts thousands seeking his healing and they have a plane too..



Kong Keng, a 2-year-old kid from Khnor village in Cambodia, is being hailed as a miracle baby with special healing powers.  Thousands of people are traveling from as far as Laos and Vietnam, believing that even a glimpse of Kong will help cure them of their ailments
He appears to be the last ray of hope in a nation that doesn’t exactly have the world’s best healthcare system. Hundreds of people throng outside Kong’s single-room wooden home every single day. It’s a motley crowd of handicapped people in wheelchairs, and ailing, dying patients on stretchers. Phat Soen, Kong’s 21-year-old mother, brings the boy out and places a row of eucalyptus balm bottles in front of him. She then guides his hand over each bottle – his touch is believed to transfer healing powers to the balm.

“The miracle happened to my brother,” said Sung Bahn, Kong’s uncle. “He was paralysed from the waist down after a motorcycle accident. Doctors couldn’t cure him and neither could the Kru Khmers (traditional Cambodian healers).” “He went to visit his nephew and the boy asked him, ‘What’s the matter?’ The man told him that he couldn’t walk, so the boy found some leaves to make into a tea for the old man to drink.

 He drank the tea, got up, and began walking perfectly.” Naturally, such a miraculous event couldn’t remain a secret for long – the whole village was buzzing about it, and within two weeks the story was covered by national newspapers and TV channels.   effective treatment   “Twenty thousand people have come here in the last month hoping to be cured,” said village chief Sou Hen. “Over 1,000 people have received effective treatment from the magic boy so far. I have seen people who were dumb speak, and others who were paralyzed get up and walk.”   Kong is now practically royalty in the sleepy little village of Khnor.
 “Most people have to wait, but he got some right away because he is the governor,” said Hean Tuk, the governor’s companion.  Unfortunately, not everyone is that lucky – some people have been waiting for as long as nine days for a cure. Naturally, the more scientifically inclined people in Cambodia are trashing the idea of the magic boy. But it’s easy to see why the boy has become so popular across the nation. “Cambodian religion believes that spirits can possess people,” said Dr. Jonathan HX Lee, Assistant Professor of Asian American Studies at San Francisco State University.  “Illness is experienced as being possessed by a spirit, and that’s why therapy would require some kind of religious ritual.” The leaves might be free of cost, but a meeting with the Kong himself isn’t. “If they want to see the boy personally, we charge them $2 or $3,” said Bahn.




Church puts up a 'God loves SEX' controversial billboard on busy highway Read

A church in Pennsylvania has taken the unusual step of putting up a billboard which preaches God's love for sex. The Restored Church in the city of Wilkes-Barre erected the huge message, which reads: "'I Love SEX' - God".
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