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The clean-up of hundreds of sand burials along the Ganges river in India was too perfunctory, and birds and wild dogs were so hungry that they pounced on them and bit them

On May 25, the government of India's Uttar Pradesh state misbehaved in cleaning up sand burial bodies on the banks of the Ganges river and was criticized as "too perfunctory." In the video, when the municipal workers clean up the body, they simply tear off the shroud, pull out the bamboo stick marked next to the body, and then end the departure. Hundreds of bodies have been buried along the Banks of the Ganges river in recent months, where birds and wild dogs often gather to nibble on the bodies.

The clean-up of hundreds of sand burials along the Ganges river in India was too perfunctory, and birds and wild dogs were so hungry that they pounced on them and bit them
The clean-up of hundreds of sand burials along the Ganges river in India was too perfunctory, and birds and wild dogs were so hungry that they pounced on them and bit them
The clean-up of hundreds of sand burials along the Ganges river in India was too perfunctory, and birds and wild dogs were so hungry that they pounced on them and bit them
The clean-up of hundreds of sand burials along the Ganges river in India was too perfunctory, and birds and wild dogs were so hungry that they pounced on them and bit them

<h4>India's second wave of the outbreak threatened 577 children orphaned in 55 days</h4>

On the 25th local time, the Ministry of Women and Child Development of India said that in the second wave of the epidemic in India, 577 children have been orphaned because their parents died of new crown pneumonia.

According to the "Indian Express" reported on the 26th, India's Minister of Women and Child Development Ilani tweeted to confirm that from April 1, 2021 to May 25, 2021 at 2 pm, the national government reported that 577 children's parents died of new crown pneumonia. Senior officials revealed that health authorities began investigating the issue after information about the adoption of COVID-19 orphans became widely available on social media. "We have contacted all states to ask them to identify children orphaned by the COVID-19 pandemic in their areas," an official said. Based on the data we received, we determined that there are currently 577 people. ”

In response, a senior official said, "The government has allocated Rs 10 million for each district, and the money will be distributed by the district administrator under the child protection plan." Our priority is to keep children in their families and communities, not to leave them. ”

<h4>(Original title: Hundreds of sand burial corpses on the banks of the Ganges River in India to clean up the scene Birds and wild dogs often gather here to nibble on corpses).</h4>

<h4>Source: Beiwan New Visual Synthesis Observer Network People's Daily Overseas Edition</h4>

<h4>Process Edit: TF021</h4>