Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
There comes a day in every parent’s life when we have to admit a hard truth: it’s time to sell that old baby stuff. The adorable tiny sleepers, the crib, the nursing pillow … our babies grow ...
AyosDito.ph was an online classified-ads website for Filipinos to buy and sell online, regardless of their location in the Philippines. It was owned and operated by 701Search Pte. Ltd. , which is a joint venture between media giants Singapore Press Holdings and Schibsted .
Lazada modified its business model the following year to allow third-party retailers to sell their products on its platform too. [citation needed] The marketplace accounted for 65% of the company's sales in 2014. [6] [needs update] Lazada operates in Southeast Asia, except Myanmar, Laos, Cambodia, Brunei and East Timor. [7]
SM Seaside City in Cebu City. This is a list of notable shopping malls in the Philippines.The retail industry in the Philippines is an important contributor to the national economy as it accounts for approximately 15% of the country's total Gross National Product (GNP) and 33% of the entire services sector.
A pregnant 21-year-old Texas woman tried to sell her unborn baby to the “highest bidder” and shook down would-be desperate adoptive parents for cash in the maternity ward, according to cops.
Parents selling their children during the Northern Chinese Famine of 1876–79, drawn 1878. According to Frank Dikötter, in 1953 or 1954, when there was starvation, "across the country people sold their children" [8] and a 1950 report by the Chinese Communist Party on Shanghai "deplored ... the sale of children due to joblessness" [9] and, Dikötter continued, sale of children by "many" of ...
Darien Urban, 21, and Shalene Ehlers, 20, the baby's parents were arrested after they allegedly tried to sell their 2-month-old baby because having three dogs and an infant was "not working."
Child harvesting or baby harvesting refers to the systematic sale of human children, typically for adoption by families in the developed world, but sometimes for other purposes, including trafficking. The term covers a wide variety of situations and degrees of economic, social, and physical coercion.