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Paket Umroh Full di bulan Ramadhan

Anda sedang mencari rumah strategis di wilayah bekasi utara, dengan akses jalan yang mudah di tempuh .Di Jual Rumah Di Wilayah Bekasi Utara

Rumah yang kami tawarkan ini, berada di wilayah perumahan, dengan mempunyai fasilitas sebagai berikut :

1. Dekat Stasiun Bekasi

2. Dekat Sumarecon Bekasi

3. Jalan bisa di lalui dua mobil.( jalan lebar, sehingga bisa leluasa untuk lewat 2 mobil )

4. Dua kamar tidur

5. Satu Gudang

6. 1 mushola

7. Ada 2 kamar mandi.

8. Ada dak atas untuk jemur pakaian

Harga yang kami tawarkan sangatlah fantastis, dengan ukuran rumah yg sangat leluasa, serta akses jalan sangatlah mudah.

Untuk info lebih lengkap/jelas silahkan hubungi kami di

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CARI RUMAH DEKAT SUMARECON BEKASI
Photo
 
Many bodies prepared for cremation last week in Kathmandu were of young men from Gongabu, a common stopover for Nepali migrant workers headed overseas. Credit Daniel Berehulak for The New York Times

KATHMANDU, Nepal — When the dense pillar of smoke from cremations by the Bagmati River was thinning late last week, the bodies were all coming from Gongabu, a common stopover for Nepali migrant workers headed overseas, and they were all of young men.

Hindu custom dictates that funeral pyres should be lighted by the oldest son of the deceased, but these men were too young to have sons, so they were burned by their brothers or fathers. Sukla Lal, a maize farmer, made a 14-hour journey by bus to retrieve the body of his 19-year-old son, who had been on his way to the Persian Gulf to work as a laborer.

“He wanted to live in the countryside, but he was compelled to leave by poverty,” Mr. Lal said, gazing ahead steadily as his son’s remains smoldered. “He told me, ‘You can live on your land, and I will come up with money, and we will have a happy family.’ ”

Weeks will pass before the authorities can give a complete accounting of who died in the April 25 earthquake, but it is already clear that Nepal cannot afford the losses. The countryside was largely stripped of its healthy young men even before the quake, as they migrated in great waves — 1,500 a day by some estimates — to work as laborers in India, Malaysia or one of the gulf nations, leaving many small communities populated only by elderly parents, women and children. Economists say that at some times of the year, one-quarter of Nepal’s population is working outside the country.

Nepal’s Young Men, Lost to Migration, Then a Quake

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