Stonemind's Posts
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emmanuel4758: what ? Ar u dreamin or maditatin did u just say s.a waz goin to win what when naija don already win mandela cup dis girl abi na lady or woman funy sha abeg port bak to s.a we dnt ned dual sim .mtchewlolz........ i beg give my babe respect naaaw |
wott da fok?? i'v been having this from the 3yrs now and am not complaining! @op pls chill. |
fijiano202: After spending alot of money sending you to school this is all you have time to do,i dont know whether you like or hate arsenal,if u have so much time on ur hand why dont you write all the players that never won trophies or write abt the problem of ur country.you are a FOO1 |
7 Gone are the days of Arsenal competing for trophies. Every summer for the past 8 years they have sold at least one of their star players. I have a look at 27 players who have left since The Gunners last trophy but have gone on to win trophies with their new clubs. Ashley Cole(9 trophies) He moved across London to Chelsea in 2006 and has gone on to win one Premier League, one Champions League, four FA Cups, one League Cup, one Community Shield and one Europa League. Patrick Vieira(8 trophies) Left the Emirates in 2005 for Italy and has won the Serie A five times and the Super Cup twice. Moved to Man City to finish his career and won the FA Cup in 2011. Thierry Henry(7 trophies) He moved to Barcelona in 2007 and went on to win the La Liga twice, one Copa del Rey, one Spanish Cup, one Champions League, one Uefa Super Cup and one Club World Cup. Alexander Hleb(5 trophies) He left in 2008 and went on to win one La Liga, one Copa del Rey and one Champions League with Barcelona. He signed for Birmingham in 2010 and won the League cup beating Arsenal in the final. He then went to Bate Borisov in Belarus and won the Belarusian Premier League in 2012. Eduardo(5 trophies) He left the club in 2010 for Shakhtar Donetsk and went on to win Ukrainian Premier League twice, the Ukrainian Super Cup twice and the Ukrainian Super Cup once. Cesc Fabregas(5 trophies) He left in 2011 to rejoin his boyhood club Barcelona. He has gone on to win one La Liga, one Copa del Rey, one Spanish Super Cup, one Uefa Super Cup and one Club World Cup. Lasanna Diarra(4 trophies) Left The Gunners in 2008 and went on to achieve success with Portsmouth and Real Madrid. He won La Liga, one Spanish Super Cup, one Copa del Rey and one English FA Cup. Jose Antonio Reyes(4 trophies) He left in 2007 and went on to collect one La Liga with Real Madrid, one Portuguese Super Cup with Benfica and one Europe League and one Uefa Super Cup with Atletico Madrid. Stephen O'Donnell(4 trophies) He left in 2005 although it was to The League of Ireland, a much lesser league than the Premier League. He has went on to win the League of Ireland twice(once with Bohemians and once with Shamrock Rovers). He has also won one Setanta Sports Cup with Shamrock Rover. Kolo Toure(3 trophies) He left in 2009 and has won one Premier League, one Community Shield and one FA cup with Manchester City. Mathieu Flamini(2 trophies) He left in 2008 for Italy and won one Seria A and one Italian Super Cup with AC Milan. Gael Clichy(2 trophies) He left London for Manchester in 2011 and won one Premier League and one Community Shield with Manchester City. Samir Nasri(2 trophies) He swapped the Emirates for the Etihad in 2011 and won one Premier League and one Community shield with Manchester City. Gilberto Silva(2 trophies) He left rainy England for sunny Greece in 2008 and won one Greek Super League and one Greek Football Cup with Panathinaikos. Emmanuel Eboue(2 trophies) He left for Turkey in 2011 and won one Super Lig and one Super Kupa with Galatasaray. Anthony Stokes(4 trophies) He move north of the border to Scottish giants Glasgow Celtic in 2007 and went on to win two Scottish Premier Leagues and two Scottish Cups. Matthew Connolly(2 trophies) He left in 2008 and has won two Football League Championships, one with QPR and one with Reading. |
Just as C. Ronaldo escourts L. Messi every year to receive his award for Ballon D'i or... So shall your enemies watch you receive your glory every day and time.. If you believe it, write a believing AMEN. |
Just as C. Ronaldo escourts L. Messi every year to receive his award for Ballon D'i or... So shall your enemies watch you receive your glory every day and time.. If you believe it, write a believing AMEN. |
and so forkin wot? |
Ms_Steph: Hi. Pls since d christians allowed u guys to celebrate sallah in peace can u guys also return the favor during our celebrations. Thank uu'v lost ur mindd |
pls how can i join?? |
Adamskuty: what happened last night ?ADuLTREY |
lolz....... |
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Protesters promised "safe exit" if they leave now, interior ministry says, as German FM meets interim government. The Egyptian interior ministry has urged protesters to leave camps in Cairo set up by supporters of deposed President Mohamed Morsi, one day after the army-backed interim government ordered it to take action against them. In a statement read on state TV on Thursday, the interior ministry offered "a safe exit" to protesters who heeded the call. No specified date has been decided upon for clearing out the sit-in, spokesman Hany Abdel Latif told Reuters news agency. The ministry "calls on those in Rabaa al-Adawiya and Nahda squares to let reason and the national interest prevail, and to quickly leave," it said in a statement. A day earlier, the interim government authorised police to break up the weeks-long protests, saying that officers will take "gradual steps" to disperse crowds. Later on Thursday, Germany's Guido Westerwelle, the first foreign minister to visit Egypt since Morsi was deposed, urged authorities to avoid "the appearance of selective justice". Speaking alongside his Egyptian counterpart Nabil Fahmy, he said: "There is no justice of vengeance and no selective justice. There is law and it applies to everyone." Earlier, authorities said they had referred the leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, Mohammed Badie, and two other senior movement officials to a court on charges of inciting violence. Following the warning against rallies, the US State Department urged Egypt to respect the right of peaceful assembly. "We have continued to urge the interim government, officials and security forces, to respect the right of peaceful assembly," deputy spokeswoman Marie Harf told a news briefing. "That obviously includes sit-ins." Morsi's supporters have been camped out in both squares demanding his reinstatement since July 3 when he was removed from power by the military. 'Gradual steps' The interior ministry later clarified Wednesday's statement, saying that police would take "gradual steps" to clear protesters. Amnesty International said the decision to mandate security forces to end the pro-Morsi rallies is a "recipe for further bloodshed". "Given the Egyptian security forces' record of policing demonstrations with the routine use of excessive and unwarranted lethal force, this latest announcement gives a seal of approval to further abuse," said Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui, deputy director for the Middle East and North Africa at Amnesty. "The authorities as well as the security forces should start with an approach that avoids the use of force and is based on ‘methods of persuasion, negotiation and mediation’, as recommended by international standards," she added. More than 200 people have been killed in weeks of violence since the army deposed Morsi. EU envoy Bernadino Leon was in Cairo on Wednesday to press the mediation effort. US Republican senators John McCain and Lindsey Graham said on Wednesday that they would also visit Egypt to help quell violence and press for elections. Speaking to Al Jazeera, Amr Abd Elaty, an expert on US-Egypt relations at the Al Ahram Research Centre, said: "There is a political division between the US Senate and White House, and right now there is a lot of pressure on President Barack Obama because some senators feel that he did not preserve relations with liberals in Egypt, he said. "They think that he backed the Muslim Brotherhood, a group that many see as violent, oppressive and a threat to women’s rights."
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Lawyer Anatoly Kucherena showed a photocopy of the document given to Mr Snowden US intelligence leaker Edward Snowden has left the Moscow airport where he had been staying since June after being granted temporary asylum. Mr Snowden's lawyer said he had left after receiving the papers he needed to enter Russian territory from Sheremetyevo Airport's transit zone. The US has charged Mr Snowden with leaking details of its electronic surveillance programmes. Russia's decision is likely to further strain its ties with the US. The BBC's Daniel Sandford in Moscow says a strongly worded US reaction can be expected shortly. Mr Snowden arrived in Moscow on 23 June from Hong Kong, after making his revelations. The affair has caused diplomatic ructions around the world, upsetting the United States' close allies and traditional enemies. 'Most pursued man' Mr Snowden left the airport at about 14:00 local time (10:00 GMT), the airport press office told the BBC. Despite a heavy presence of journalists, his departure was apparently not spotted by media. His lawyer, Anatoly Kucherena, said: "His location is not being made public for security reasons, since he is the most pursued man on the planet. "He himself will decide where he will go." The whistleblowing organisation Wikileaks, which has been helping him since he made his revelations, said in a tweet that he had been given asylum. "Edward Snowden was granted temporary asylum in Russia for a year and has now left Moscow airport under the care of Wikileaks' Sarah Harrison," it said. Ms Harrison is a member of the Wikileaks legal team and has been helping Mr Snowden. Mr Kucherena also said he had been awarded temporary asylum and showed a photocopy of the document issued to his client. The document, which resembles a Russian ID card and features a fingerprint, shows an issue date of 31 July and expiry date of 31 July 2014. 'Rather insignificant' US Attorney General Eric Holder has given Moscow an assurance that Mr Snowden will not face the death penalty if extradited. But the Russians say they do not intend to hand him over. Russian President Vladimir Putin said previously that Mr Snowden could receive asylum in Russia on condition he stopped leaking US secrets. Mr Putin's foreign policy advisor Yury Ushakov said the situation was "rather insignificant" and should not influence relations with the US. "We know what sort of noise surrounds this [situation] in America, but we have not received any signals from the United States," he said. Edward Snowden fled to Moscow from Hong Kong in June US President Barack Obama is due to visit Moscow next month. Mr Obama was holding a private meeting with US legislators in the Oval Office on Thursday to discuss the surveillance programmes run by the National Security Agency (NSA). Among the information leaked by Mr Snowden, which first surfaced in the UK's Guardian newspaper in early June, was the revelation that the NSA was collecting the telephone records of tens of millions of Americans. The systems analyst also disclosed that the NSA had tapped directly into the servers of nine internet firms including Facebook, Google, Microsoft and Yahoo to track online communication in a surveillance programme known as Prism. Prism was allegedly also used by Britain's electronic eavesdropping agency, GCHQ. The agency was further accused of sharing vast amounts of data with the NSA. Allegations that the NSA had spied on its EU allies caused indignation in Europe.
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which 1 concern me ![]() ?? |
so? |
lolz....... unburnt bible my @ss |
#TEAMatheist |
egift: Am still try to imagine the part that is funny.bros ur english naa die |
fishkaveli: What!!!c'mon dnt be shy! |
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@fishkaveli are u gay?? u look cool |
.ohhh my f**king god hope i'm nt dreaming ![]() ![]() 4th to comment![]() ![]() ? ha guys/girls pls how many question did i ask![]() ![]() |
mumus waisting there damn time |
, |
igalas are the problem of kogi state |
hahahhahhahahhahhaahhahhahhahahh pls i need a permission to laugh in SPANISH |
3rd |
10 |
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