Top 10 most extreme cultural body modification in the world. (18+)
A Thread.🍬♥️
10. Tribal mark.
The primary function of the tribal marks is for identification of a person’s tribe or family and it is a key factor to the people’s survival and existence During the trans-Atlantic slave trade.
Tribal marks mean different things to different tribes.
9. A young woman in South Omo, Ethiopia, with similar scars on her arm.
8. Another woman from the Mursi tribe wearing a lip plate and a set of cow horns atop her head.
The more decorative her appearance, the higher her standing is
7. This Mursi woman, pictured with her infant, is not wearing her lip plate but the gaping hole remains
6. Women of the Apatani tribe in Arunachal Pradesh, India, traditionally wore these nose plugs to make themselves look less attractive
Become a million with sport bet.🔥🔥
This channel offers premium free tips to make more money.
💰💸
Big bets is the best channel 🤭😍🥰
5. A man from the Abyei region of Sudan with scars inflicted on his forehead
4. In Indonesia’s Dani Village, New Guinea, some women like this one cut off the tips of their fingers when a relative dies.
3. A woman in 2008 from a Baka tribe of pygmies in the Dzanga-Sangha Forest Reserve, Central African Republic.
2. Women from the Kayan Lahwi tribe in Myanmar start adding brass coils to their necks from the age of five, the weight of which pushes the collar bone down and compresses the rib cage to give the illusion of longer necks.
1. A woman from the African tribe of Mursi in Omo Valley, Ethiopia, displays her lip plate
💰💸
⚫2-5 odds (4-5) accurate tickets daily
⚫well analyze(HT/FT) CS😳😳
⚫10+ odds on weekends🤑
🔌🔌🔌STAKE $ WIN🔌🔌🔌
Free Tips on Telegram platform.
👣 Big bet specializes in FT draw predictions ➕ high
TOP 10 MOST POWERFUL COUNTRY IN AFRICA BY MILITARY. [2021]
A Thread. 🍬
10. Sudan. 🇸🇩
The Sudanese Armed Forces are the military forces of the Republic of Sudan.
During the 39-month transition to democracy that started in September 2019, the August 2019 Draft Constitutional Declaration defines the Supreme Commander of the Sudanese Armed Forces
to be the mixed civilian–military Sovereignty Council. In 2011, IISS estimated the regular forces' numbers at 109300 personnel, while in 2016–2017, the Rapid Support Forces had 40000 members participating in the Yemeni Civil War (of which 10000 returned to Sudan by October 2019)