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Best Japanese City Ranking 10

If you traveling Japan ? Don't forget to check Best Japanese City Ranking.

1) TOKYO

2) KYOTO




3) KANAGAWA

4) OSAKA

5) CHIBA



6) AICHI

7) NARA

8 ) HIROSHIMA

9) OKINAWA

10) HYOGO




Who like travel to Japan



From today i will you try to give you information about Japan and Japanese culture. lets check Japan and Japanese culture.


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31 missing Gorkha monastery kids found



KATHMANDU, JUN 21 - Thirty-one children from Lho Monastery of Gorkha , who along with 184 others were reported missing after the April 25 earthquake, have come into contact, the Central Child Welfare Board (CCWB) has said.

Namuna Bhusal, CCWB programme officer, said children were brought to Kathmandu on Friday and put up in a shelter home in Thankot. “Some children were brought by their parents while others were traced by our district officers,” said Bhusal.

The Kathmandu District Administration Office said that all the 31 children are safe and sound.

“The children are in good hands and they are being taken very good care of,” said Ek Narayan Aryal, the chief district officer of Kathmandu .

Meanwhile, it has been revealed that out of the 175 children that had been rescued in three different phases after the earthquake, 59 had been brought to Kathmandu legally, under the supervision of the women development officer of Gorkha , Sita Adhikari.

“I had brought 59 children from the monastery with me after completing all legal procedures more than a week ago,” said Adhikari.

Since the earthquake, police have rescued 337 children from Dhading, Dolakha, Kavre, Okhaldhunga, Rasuwa, Nuwakot, Lamjung and Rukum districts.




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動物たちの面白い動画



動物の面白い動画

Pickle the Mini Pig brushes teeth before bed by Rumble Virals

Dog casually rides three-wheeled ATV by Rumble Virals


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赤ちゃんの面白い動画



赤ちゃんの面白い動画みつけました。皆さんも良かったら見てくださいね。


赤ちゃんの面白い動画も見つかりました。

Twins Brothers Enjoying Bath Time by Spicywoods

2016 Funniest Amazing Babies and Kids Hilarious Compilation Videos by Mixvideos

Adorable Puppy Attacks Baby by Rumble Virals


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面白い猫動画

毎月1,000名が登録!「保育のお仕事」
保育士・幼稚園教諭専門の転職支援サービス


皆さんこんにちは今日ねっとで見つけた 猫の面白い動画です。良かったらみてくださいね。
面白い猫動画1

Funny Videos Of Cats And Babies Compilation 2015 by Funny Video

面白い猫動画2

Funny Video Baby Clips - Cute Cat Loves Baby From Funny And Cute Cats And Babies Collection New by ABDULLAH

Mom Cat Really Wants Kitten Back - Video Dailymotion by Spicy World


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An Alley Cat 野良猫

今日部屋の前で撮った可愛野良猫の動画、


可愛いノラ猫 an alley cat by HPG

Back to school



JUN 01 - Luckily for us, the Great Earthquake hit Nepal on a Saturday, and not a weekday. This meant that most offices and businesses were closed, but more importantly, schools were not in session and children were at home. According to the Ministry of Education, 16,475 classrooms in 6,902 public schools were destroyed in the earthquakes, while 7,266 classrooms have suffered major damages and 12,613 minor damages. The education of around 2 million students in 14 hard-hit districts came to a screeching halt.

Now, parents watch with trepidation as their children trundle off to their schools, which reopened on Sunday after a five-week hiatus. The intensity and frequency of aftershocks have gone down in recent days, which has encouraged increasing numbers of parents to send their kids to schools. But concerns, understandably, remain. The government has yet to assess the structural integrity of all school buildings, both private and public, and parents are unsure if schools now have earthquake drills and proper preparedness plans in place. A parent suggested in a tweet on Monday that he would like to see the curriculum changed post quake.

Still, the sight of uniformed children on their way to get an education is a sight for sore eyes, bringing much- needed normalcy back to life in the Valley.

In the districts, however, the situation remains bleak. Though schools conducted formal reopening ceremonies, many students were told to go home and return only after a week. School buildings all over the nation are dangerously damaged and many don’t have the wherewithal to conduct classes under temporary arrangements. “In Sindhupalchok,” reported author Aditya Adhikari on Twitter, “only 34 of 591 schools have managed to construct a tent or a shed.” Many schools have also lost teachers and students. The Sangkosh Higher Secondary School in Dhading mourned the loss of 240 teachers and students in the earthquake before ending the school day.

It is vital that the government gets its act together and provides the assistance necessary for these schools to resume classes. The Department of Education had earmarked Rs 25,000 for each school to construct a temporary alternative, but a parliamentary monitoring committee found that many schools had yet to receive the cash. The schools were supposed to procure zinc sheets and tarpaulin, both in short supply, on their own. This situation must be rectified, with the cash released and the building material provided.

While it is extremely important to resume the interrupted education of millions, it is even more important that this be done in a manner that ensures the children’s safety. A number of schools in the Valley are conducting classes in shifts—only certain grades on certain days—and on the ground floor of their premises and under makeshift structures. But it is not clear how many have earthquake drills and exit plans in place and whether they have taken any lessons from the Great Quake. Earthquake-safety responses perhaps also need to take local contexts into account. The traditional ‘duck, cover and hold’ technique has come into question, with many children actually either running into their houses or staying put in collapsing houses even when open spaces were close by. The recent major earthquakes should be a wakeup call. We have to be willing to learn from the mistakes we have made.

Nepal Earthquake 2015 CCTV 4 by HPG


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People reach highlands in droves to collect ‘Himalayan Viagra’



DOLPA, JUN 02 - With the official date for entry into the highlands for the collection of Yarshagumba approaching fast, villages located in the lower region have gone empty while schools wear a deserted look as the students at various schools have abandoned their classes and are now headed for the highlands.

According to headmaster Laxman Karki of Dhurbatara Primary School at Upper Dunai, while students from relatively distant locations have already left for the highlands, the remaining were making necessary arrangements for early departure to collect the high-altitude wild fungus that is prized for its aphrodisiac qualities.

All of the schools in Lower and Upper Dunai, including Dhurabatara Primary at Upper Dunai, Balmandir Primary School and Saraswati Higher Secondary at the district headquarters are sans students.

Ambika Hamal, a teacher at Balmandir Primary School, said that the school has not had a single student since the last one week.

Likewise, headmaster Narendra Bikram GC of Saraswati HS School said that the teachers, in the absence of students, had been spending their time engaging in small talk.

Even Assistant District Education Officer Bir Bahadur Dhami said that they had been informed that regular classes had been halted at almost all of the schools in the district.

“As the parents take their children along with them to collect as many of the precious herb as they can, schools have not been able to operate classes,” Dhami said.

From a six-year-old child to a 70-year-old elderly, everyone in the district head for the highlands in search of the precious herb as it happens to be the only source of income for a majority of them.

Moreover, even schools in neighbouring districts such as Jajarkot, Rukum and Jumla have been affected by the tendency.

“Thousands of students like us from Jajarkot and Rukum have come here as this is the time to earn rather than attend classes,” said Dhirendra Shahi, a ninth grader at Kalika Adarsha Secondary School in Jajarkot.

According to the statistics maintained by the District Education Office, some 9,500 students at 87 Primary, 18 Lower Secondary, nine Secondary and five Higher Secondary Schools in Dolpa are currently sans students. The DEO stated that schools in the district remain affected for 15-20 days each year during the season when locals collect Yarshagumba, which is often known throughout the world as ‘Himalayan Viagra’

Although the highlands were opened from Nepali month of Jestha 10, the date was postponed to Jestha 18 due to heavy downpours and snowfall.

Kids off to pick Yarsha, schools closed

DARCHULA: Following the annual rush of students to the highlands in pursuit of the precious Yarshagumba, schools in the district have decided to close down for 20 days effective from the second week of Nepali month of Jestha to Asadh second week. The DEO stated that they had taken the decision to close the schools for 15-20 following a meeting of the school management committee and local stakeholders. The DEO stated that the schools have decided to compensate for the closure by cutting off holidays during the monsoons and dry season.

“As the collection and sale of precious herb is the main source of income for majority of locals in more than 21 VDCs, whole families in the district head to the highlands in search of the herb,” said teacher Harish Bahadur Bam of Sampal Secodary School in Sunsera VDC.


タグ:News hpgrg Nepal
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