REMITTANCEKO DUKHA – EMOTIONAL NEPALI SHORT MOVIE WATCH VIDEO

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This agricultural country used to export herbs and tea leaves. Now it exports individuals. At least 2.2 million Nepalis — nearly ten p.c of the population — work abroad, according to the Nepal Institute of Development Studies. And that number doesn’t embody Nepalis United Nations agency leave to figure lawlessly. Nepal is one of the most recent participants in a very trend that has reworked South Asia: the mass migration of its low-skilled staff. About thirty six million South Asians live outside the region of their birth, according to U.N. data. The workers ar a key supply of financial gain for poor countries. In Nepal, remittances account for nearly 26 p.c of the gross domestic product, a higher percentage than in even Central American country or Haiti. But in recent years, Nepalis have become increasingly afraid by the value paid by thousands of migrants. Some suffer depression as they leave tiny villages and travel alone to foreign cities wherever they don’t speak the language.



Others face abuse, including long hours and beatings. Each year, hundreds return back in laminate coffins. Still, the risks haven’t discouraged many young Nepalis from dreaming of going to work overseas. Among them is Dong’s youngest brother. Last fall, he began to think concerning going this village in central Kingdom of Nepal. “There are no jobs here, and there is no other supply of financial gain for North American country,” Amit Kumar Dong, 20, said in Associate in Nursing interview in Nov.As he spoke on the porch of the family’s home, his comatose sister lay in a dark room upstairs, covered in a dingy blanket. Her mother fed her a thick fluid made from ground soybeans and chickpeas through a tube in her chest.

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