The family of Sanjay KC of Banke is waiting for the body

Falgun 13, 2080

Rupa Gahatraj

The family of Sanjay KC of Banke is waiting for the body

We use Google Cloud Translation Services. Google requires we provide the following disclaimer relating to use of this service:

This service may contain translations powered by Google. Google disclaims all warranties related to the translations, expressed or implied, including any warranties of accuracy, reliability, and any implied warranties of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, and noninfringement.

61-year-old Asar KC of Baijnath rural municipality-6H village in Banke is lighting and extinguishing cigarettes. Three daughters are sitting around him who is restless and restless and comforting him. Beside him, his wife is suffering from neurological problems.

Amar's family, whose 38-year-old son Sanjay was killed in Russia on Saturday, has become even more frantic. Amar's younger son is also employed abroad. The family, which was shocked when the disease was not detected even after searching everywhere for the treatment of his wife, who was suffering from vein-related problems for a long time, has become more distressed after the death of Sanjay.

'Now I am not able to speak. I am begging you to send my son's body," Amar said, "Who wants to send their son to the face of death? If they had known that he was going to join the Russian army, they would not have let him leave the house. Now I have lost my son. There is news that we will send the body from there. I am waiting for that.'

38-year-old Sanjay KC, who came to know about the incident on January 22, tried to find out his condition. Despite taking many measures, there was no news about Sanjay's condition. The family, who were waiting for news, received the body and the death certificate on their mobile only on February 4. The next day, 5th of February, according to religious tradition, Kazkiria started.

'After the news of the death was confirmed, we did the work because we could not stop my father,' said Parvati KC, the elder sister of the deceased, 'After we received a letter from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs saying that he had died, we took care that we had lost our brother.' It was Sanjay who walked. Parvati said that although the sisters had a phone conversation on 29th of January, they did not say anything about the pain. "My brother did not talk about anything that was painful. The phone was the last one that day, she said. Sanjay's wife, 33-year-old Sapna KC, said that even she did not know that her husband was going to join the Russian army.

'Most of them couldn't even have a conversation on the phone' Sapna said, 'He used to use an iPhone. They did not even allow us to use the phone because there is a location trace.' Sanjay, who walked to Kathmandu without saying anything more than applying for a visa at home, once reported to his home after being recruited into the Russian army. Sanjay's 13-year-old son, who is studying in class 7, is preparing for the exam after finishing his father's homework.

Sanjay, who was employed in the Nepali Army, went missing for a week during the armed conflict in Gorusinge, Arghakhanchi. He left the army after two and a half years to save his life. After working abroad for five years in Malaysia and Dubai, he later started a hardware business in the village. He started his business after finding a loan of 500,000, but after he had trouble running his household, he fell into the trap of human traffickers and joined the Russian army.

"A promising young man lost his life due to little ambition, much poverty, unemployment and no income," said Nanda Vishwakarma, a neighbor, "There is no environment for young people to do anything here." Today, a family's happiness was robbed because the government could not give them the ability to live with their own family in their old age.'

Rupa

Link copied successfully