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Over 500,000 Indians NRI stuck diaspora to be repatriated to India from GCC

Can you tell at least one province .?
Forget about that entire shithole region.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kerala_model

Street shitter Pakistani Lol.
You are nothing .
Dont try to escape from the base question ?


still no cohesive answer?....


what a malu..

once again which European country has the same HDI as india?...


a non response = every body on PDF will know you are just another indian liar.. like your gov. like your nation

You are nothing .


if so .. why have you dedicated over 10+ posts to "nothing"?..

Street shitter Pakistani Lol.

I have only see indians taking a dump in the streets... never seen a Pakistani do that?..

please share if you have...
 
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Many Hindus (especially in the South, but also in other regions of the country) stash a lot of money in temples. The famous Tirupati temple, gets around 100 kg of gold every month or 1.2 tonnes a year. Also, a lot of cash. They are like de facto banks for the corrupt banyas...no taxes, no oversights. The Indian law enforcement dare not attack a temple to probe about hidden money. It is an extremely corrupt system....they almost bribe the Gods.

It is believed that if the temples part with all their hidden wealth, India's poverty will disappear overnight. But no...it seems the gods want to keep many people poor. It's the cosmos design by Vishnu, or something like that (I have heard these arguments). Many Hindus when they commit an act of charity, will announce it from the rooftops. Recently, Akshay Kumar donated Rs. 25 crore for the Coronavirus in Modi's personal fund...of course, he made a big PR announcement around that. This is a very corrupt thinking...I don't think if there is a God, he will be amused.

No one really knows how much wealth is stashed in temples all around the country.
Make India a hindu rashtra and we can take that money
 
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Yaar this woman is hot and cold. One moment she's tweeting against Indians the next moment she's on NDTV giving interviews to Indian about the hospitality of Indian people and her Indian nannies.


not really.. that is human nature/trait.. dont we all have positive and negative experince from the same entity/person? .....the world is grey.


in her case bcos of her status indian dare not mess with her.

Pakistanis generally have a negative experince with indians so that why we are critical.
 
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well replacing indians is more due to the employment situation in oman. omanis are plenty educated and willing to work for menial jobs that others GCC citizens are unwilling to...


and yes that is correct indian hindus support them selves in hiring process and during employment ensure other nationalities especially Pakistanis have a difficult time ...

it is a cycle i have seen across entities the board.
 
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well replacing indians is more due to the employment situation in oman. omanis are plenty educated and willing to work for menial jobs that others GCC citizens are unwilling to...


and yes that is correct indian hindus support them selves in hiring process and during employment ensure other nationalities especially Pakistanis have a difficult time ...

it is a cycle i have seen across entities the board.

Every nation tries to support itself in the Gulf. That's the standard format. With Indians it is more about Kerala muslims trying to get their families and friends inside. Malabari( north kerala) and Misri( Egyptian) are the most over represented people in the Gulf.
 
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Every nation tries to support itself in the Gulf.


true. but indians are notoriously predatory along with along with levant nationalities .. the worse of the bunch. They create such a toxic work envionment.

best people to work with are US, UK, germans can be annal but fair. The french are just silly jokers.
 
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true. but indians are notoriously predatory along with along with levant nationalities .. the worse of the bunch. They create such a toxic work envionment.

best people to work with are US, UK, germans can be annal but fair. The french are just silly jokers.

Indians say the same about pakistani. I stayed away from all these gangs. I mingled with everyone and my interest was also international.
 
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I have only see indians taking a dump in the streets... never seen a Pakistani do that?..

More than 40m Pakistanis defecate openly: Unicef
APUpdated March 08, 2015
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Pakistan is the third-largest country when it comes to people going to the bathroom in the open, behind India and Indonesia. — INP/File
ISLAMABAD: More than 40 million people in Pakistan do not have access to a toilet, forcing them to defecate in the open, which in turn is a major contributor to stunting in the country, a top Unicef official said.

“There are 41 million people who do not have access to a toilet in Pakistan and as a result they are defecating in the open. And open defecation has significant health and nutritional consequences,” said Geeta Rao Gupta, deputy executive director at Unicef.

She recently spoke to the AP during a trip to Pakistan to draw attention to the problem.

“Open defecation is a major contributor to stunting and that's why we've got to do all we can to stop it,” she said. The problem can spread disease and lead to intestinal infections, which can contribute to stunting in young children, she said.

Stunting means children don't grow as tall as they would otherwise, and it can also affect a child's brain development. Stunted children are more at risk of disease, don't do as well in school and stunted mothers can also give birth to stunted children.

Pakistan is the third-largest country when it comes to people going to the bathroom in the open, behind India and Indonesia.

Unicef is working with the Pakistani government to improve sanitation by doing things like encouraging people to wash their hands more often.

They're also working with communities to help them build toilets so they don't have to use the bathroom in a field or elsewhere.

The Pakistan Approach to Total Sanitation (PATS) is a sanitation program adapted from the Community Approach to Total Sanitation by Unicef in Pakistan. PATS aims to create open defecation free (ODF) villages in Pakistan by making the practice of saying no to open defecation a social norm.

However, the situation for sanitation is still bleak: approximately 43 million Pakistanis still defecate in the open, and our Millennium Development Goal (MDG 7) of increasing access to sanitation may not be met until 2027.

Read more: ‘52pc of Pakistanis combat unsanitary conditions’

The public health implications are severe. Some three million Pakistanis face infections from waterborne diseases every year. Children are especially affected by illnesses such as diarrhoea, often caused by unsafe water and inadequate sanitation, which kills more under-fives around the world than AIDS, malaria and measles combined.

During reconstruction after the 2010 floods, NGOs built thousands of latrines and water supply schemes. But despite good intentions, many systems were unsustainable due to the lack of operation and maintenance training given to local populations.

There was a culture of subsidy in calamity-hit areas. Local authorities absolved themselves of responsibility for water and sanitation systems and instead looked to external donors. But many private water service providers refuse to cover operation and maintenance costs due to low tariffs and poor profitability.

Access to water and sanitation, a human right essential to lives and livelihoods, must be protected and fulfilled, regardless of profitability.

There is a lack of policy on water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) in Pakistan ─ and where it exists, it tends to be poorly informed and often implemented without consulting local people.

National and provincial politicians have allocated funds to water and sanitation but in Fata, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, rural Sindh, Punjab and Balochistan, open defecation is practised widely and using a toilet in the home is considered to be taboo.

The solution is about more than funding. As Jan Eliasson, UN deputy secretary general, said last year, we must dismantle taboos: As was the case for the word `toilets` a few years ago, it is time to incorporate `open defecation` in the political language and in diplomatic discourse.

DAWN
 
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