REMAINS OF THE SUNKED OLD BETAL VILLAGE!! Story of Gajah Mungkur Reservoir Village, Wonogiri
 Indonesian Village Stories Indonesian Village Stories
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 Published On Premiered Oct 26, 2023

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REMAINS OF THE SUNKED OLD BETAL VILLAGE!! Story of Gajah Mungkur Reservoir Village, Wonogiri

✨ Village friends ✨

This time, the Indonesian village story video content will continue the adventures of Khabib and Zahwa to visit and go on an adventure to one of the villages and villages in Indonesia. Villages and villages in Indonesia provide natural views of the countryside such as rice fields, hills, mountains and houses of villagers and village communities which are very beautiful and rare. The atmosphere in the village is very rare and rarely found in the city. The atmosphere of villages and villages in Indonesia is still beautiful, natural, cool and comfortable. Villagers and villagers usually live in hills, rice fields and mountains with a beautiful natural village atmosphere. The atmosphere of villages and villages will make us nostalgic, nostalgic, and feel like we are back in the villages and villages of the past when we were small and lived in the village. The atmosphere of ancient villages and villages will always be remembered as a beautiful view.

📍 This time Indonesian Village Stories will explore the atmosphere of villages/villages along the slopes of Mount Merapi and Merbabu. Precisely in Pokoh Kidul Village, Wonogiri District, Wonogiri Regency, Central Java Province.

Village friends, the Gajah Mungkur Reservoir in Wonogiri Regency was inaugurated by President Soeharto on November 17 1981. The process of building the reservoir which is 6 kilometers to the southwest of Wonogiri City began in 1974. This reservoir is one of four large reservoirs built in Bengawan Solo project. This project was carried out to control the damaging properties of the Bengawan Solo river water and make it more useful. To build the reservoir, no less than 51 villages were submerged and more than 13,000 families were relocated because their land and rice fields were flooded by the dam water. Most of them transmigrated to West Sumatra, Jambi, Bengkulu and South Sumatra.

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