Colombo - Sri Lanka's president has offered the services of his spiritual healer and personal physician to help injured former England captain David Beckham get back on the pitch within three days.
Eliyantha Lindsay White, 37, President Mahinda Rajapakse's personal physician, said that the former England captain had been invited for treatment involving "faith and ayurveda."
An official at the president's office said it had sent an invitation to Beckham to visit the island for traditional treatment after a string of Indian sports stars claimed they were helped by White.
"I am ready to treat him," White said. "His condition can be easily treated and within three days he will be able to go back to playing."
Doctors have ruled out Beckham playing for several months after the player ruptured his Achilles tendon earlier this month.
"His case is simple. I can treat him. He can play again," said White, who claims he has special "powers" that he uses, blended with traditional ayurvedic treatment practised in Sri Lanka and neighbouring India.
Star Indian batsman Sachin Tendulkar hit a record double century against South Africa last month and publicly thanked Rajapakse for giving him the services of White to treat him for a knee injury.
White has since treated three more Indian cricket players, including opening batsman Gautam Gambhir and left-arm bowler Ashish Nehra who travelled to Colombo last week for treatment by White.
White, who says he has had "special powers" since the age of 12, studied traditional medicine.
He then began treating thousands of patients using medicinal herbs from India, the seat of ayurveda, an ancient healing practice that includes medicines, meditation and diets practised on the Indian subcontinent.
White has worked as Rajapakse's personal physician since 2005. He says he does not charge for his services, but the request for treatment must come from the president. - Sapa-AFP
For a quarter century, Sri Lanka seems to have been plagued by misfortune, including a brutal civil war between the government and a separatist Tamil group. But the conflict finally ended last May, ushering in a more peaceful era for this teardrop-shaped island off India’s coast, rich in natural beauty and cultural splendors.
The island, with a population of just 20 million, feels like one big tropical zoo: elephants roam freely, water buffaloes idle in paddy fields and monkeys swing from trees. And then there’s the pristine coastline. The miles of sugary white sand flanked by bamboo groves that were off-limits to most visitors until recently are a happy, if unintended byproduct of the war.
The island, with a population of just 20 million, feels like one big tropical zoo: elephants roam freely, water buffaloes idle in paddy fields and monkeys swing from trees. And then there’s the pristine coastline. The miles of sugary white sand flanked by bamboo groves that were off-limits to most visitors until recently are a happy, if unintended byproduct of the war.
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