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Eye Lid Surgeon Chiang Mai
Looking for a surgeon to do eyelid surgery to open the eyes wider. Somebody with a lot of experience and a strong record of success. Please post any experiences. Thanks. -
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200k for tourist visa and every night hotel booking requirement
About 3 years ago I applied for a visa to a Schengen country for a stay of just over a month. They demanded hotel booking for the full period. Tried to explain I'll be traveling from place to place, might stay a bit longer in 1 place and shorter in another but at the end I had to book all nights before they accepted my application. -
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Australian Aged Pension
Problem is, if it is not legit then clicking on the link may be a virus invitation. I would have thought the link would be mygov. -
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Myanmar Junta to Sell Seized Goods Amid Deepening Cash Crisis
CJ Myanmar’s military regime is turning to seized contraband to plug a widening hole in its public finances, announcing plans to auction off thousands of confiscated goods as it grapples with a growing budget deficit. Deputy junta chief Soe Win this week urged officials to preserve the condition of seized items—mostly unlicensed vehicles, motorbikes, and imported machinery—so they can be resold swiftly to raise revenue. Since 2022, the junta claims to have seized goods worth over 575 billion kyats across 22,000 incidents. “We must take rapid legal steps so these goods can be sold to support the national budget,” said Soe Win, who also chairs the regime’s Illegal Trade Eradication Committee. Smuggling has surged as official border trade grinds to a halt in conflict-hit areas. Traders say the system is rife with extortion, where high taxes and opaque checkpoint fees make legal trade nearly impossible. “Even after paying taxes, junta checkpoints may seize our goods and demand bribes,” one Thai-Myanmar border trader told The Irrawaddy. “If you can’t pay, they’ll just take everything.” Sources say auctions will focus on unclaimed vehicles and cargo, with proceeds funnelled directly into junta coffers. In Hpa-an and Kawthaung, authorities reportedly conduct regular seizures to meet internal quotas, sometimes confiscating hundreds of trucks or goods worth up to 1 billion kyats per month. Meanwhile, junta leader Min Aung Hlaing is also tapping wealthy allies. At a second fundraising ceremony in Naypyitaw this week, cronies including tycoon Maung Weik and aviation mogul Aung Aung Zaw handed over nearly US$34 million in "donations" for earthquake relief—despite mounting evidence that junta airstrikes continue unabated in rebel-held areas. More than 3,700 people died in the March 28 quake, with survivors in Mandalay and Sagaing still sheltering in school buildings. Many are now being told to leave as schools reopen, even though debris from the disaster remains uncleared. As the junta scrambles for funds through auctions and elite donations, its grip on both the economy and the public continues to falter. -2025-05-31
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