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This is the reality for thousands of
people living in villages in Africa, Asia and South and Central
America.
These countries are sometimes called
'developing countries' because they are less economically developed
than places like the United Kingdom.
The people that live there have
traditional lifestyles which have not changed for hundreds of
years. They collect their water from the village well, grow their
own food and build their own homes. They do not have cars to travel
around in, or tractors to help farm their land. The children may
not go to school. When they are ill there is no doctor
nearby.
But places are constantly changing.
Running water, electricity, education and medical services are now
reaching some of these remote villages. This helps to improve some
things in the people's lives.
But not all these changes are for the
better. Some villages get smaller and even disappear as more and
more people move to the world's big cities in search of work and a
better lifestyle. Then the cities become more crowded and people
have to live in poor conditions called shanty towns or
slums.
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