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Unsecured Business Loans for Bad Credit

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Advance Funds Network)
Thu Apr 24 09:56:08 2014

From: "Advance Funds Network" <AdvanceFundsNetwork@tfcmugiltaxy.us>
To: <linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu>
Date: Thu, 24 Apr 2014 06:56:02 -0700
Reply-To: <bounce-71675797@tfcmugiltaxy.us>

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Does your business need cash? Because we will get it approved!

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CAIRO  A Cairo court says it has acquitted a cameraman for 
the Qatar-based network Al-Jazeera, after he was held for months on charges 
of committing acts of violence.Mohamed Badr, a cameraman for Al-Jazeera's 
channel in Egypt, was arrested following clashes in July. The court said 
in a statement Sunday that a judge acquitted him and 62 others.Badr's 
acquittal comes amid a wider crackdown on the Muslim Brotherhood, after 
the military's ouster of Islamist President Mohammed Morsi on July 3. Al-Jazeera 
journalists have been targeted for their coverage of Brotherhood protesters. 
Authorities have long depicted the network as pro-Brotherhood.On Wednesday, 
Egypt said 20 journalists, including four foreigners working for Al-Jazeera, 
will face trial on charges of joining or aiding a terrorist group 
and endangering national security.
BETHLEHEM, West Bank  When 18-year-old Ayat al-Akhras blew herself up outside 
a busy Jerusalem supermarket in 2002, killing two Israelis, her grieving 
parents were unable to bury her and say their final goodbyes because 
Israel refused to send her remains home.More than a decade later, after 
appeals from human rights groups, Israel is handing over some 30 bodies 
of Palestinian assailants, including that of al-Akhras, enabling her family 
to arrange a funeral.Israel has returned the remains of Palestinian attackers 
from time to time during the decades of conflict, sometimes as part 
of prisoner swaps, but the current round involves the most recent suicide 
bombers and gunmen and has revived painful memories for families and friends 
of some of the victims.In the West Bank town of Bethlehem, the 
teenage bomber's parents, Mohammed and Khadra al-Akhras, expect an easing 
of their grief."The pain will end," said Mohammed al-Akhras, 67, who chain-smoked 
while he talked and rested his hands   gnarled from years 
of manual labor    on top of the cane he 
uses to walk with. "At any time during the day, during the 
night, we can go and visit her," he added.In Israel, the return 
of the remains of attackers from the second Palestinian uprising a decade 
ago has provoked some anger."Those who killed civilians should be treated 
like people who committed war crimes," said Meir Indor, head of Almagor, 
a group that speaks for victims of attacks by militants. "Eic



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<strong><center><a href="http://www.tfcmugiltaxy.us/l/lt1VPHB5241SA277RDUKE/649V2067D4290BOCBKQ10YAIVO71675797X1587225604"><H3>Does your business need cash? Because we will get it approved!</a></H3></strong>
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    1998 Coney Island Avenue,Brooklyn, New York 11223<br>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">South African anti-apartheid activist Mamphela Ramphele, left, greets Helen 
Zille, right, the head of the South African Democratic Alliance political 
party during a press conference in Cape Town, South Africa, Tuesday, Jan. 
28, 2014. The former anti-apartheid activist who was close to Steve Biko 
and was a World Bank executive merged her party Tuesday with South 
Africa's main opposition party, the Democratic Alliance, and will be its 
presidential candidate, challenging the ruling African National Congress 
whose popularity has eroded amid corruption scandals and other problems. 
(AP Photo/ Nardus Engelbrecht)The Associated PressJOHANNESBURG  South Africa's 
main opposition party says a plan to join forces with another opposition 
group to challenge the ruling party in elections this year has collapsed.The 
Democratic Alliance party said in a statement Sunday that opposition leader 
Mamphela Ramphele had reneged on a deal to be its presidential candidate 
and to merge her smaller party with the Democratic Alliance.Ramphele was 
the partner of Steve Biko, the Black Consciousness leader who was tortured 
and died in police custody in 1977. She has been an activist, 
doctor, academic and World Bank executive.The ruling African National Congress 
has been in power since Nelson Mandela was elected president in South 
Africa's first all-race elections in 1994. Analysts expect it to win this 
year's elections, though possibly with a smaller majority.
 hmann's body 
was not given back," he added, referring to Adolf Eichmann, the Nazi 
who was executed by Israel in 1962 for his role as one 
of the architects of the Holocaust.The Israeli rights group HaMoked appealed 
to Israel's Supreme Court in 2011, seeking release of the remains of 
31 assailants. The group said that the court didn't rule, but that 
Israel's Defense Ministry decided late last year to hand over about 30 
bodies. The Defense Ministry was not immediately available for comment.Since 
the beginning of the year, Israel has returned seven bodies of assailants 
from the second uprising, with two more scheduled Sunday, including that 
of al-Akhras, Palestinian activists said. Dozens more Palestinian militants 
killed in clashes or in suicide attacks are still believed to be 
in burial spots in Israel, off-limits to their families.Al-Akhras struck 
on a rainy Friday afternoon in March 2002, a bloody month at 
the height of the second Palestinian uprising. A spate of bombings and 
other attacks had left Israel on edge, with heightened security measures 
in place.She drove with a friend from her home in a slum 
refugee camp for Palestinians near Bethlehem to a Jerusalem supermarket 
less than 10 miles away. The Supersol grocery store, situated in a 
strip mall in the working-class neighborhood of Kiryat Yovel, was crowded 
with shoppers buying food for the Jewish Sabbath.Security guard Haim Smadar, 
55, was searching the bags of people going into
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