Til, the remotest of three villages in the Limi valley on the Tibetan border, was already wrestling with a dwindling population but a series of natural disasters has led many to consider where their future should be
On the night of 15 May this year, the usual quiet of the Himalayan village of Til in the far north-west of Nepal was broken by a strange rumbling. Pemba Thundup came out of his house, barefoot, to see a deluge of earth, water and rocks coming down the mountainside towards the flat-roofed mud houses. The whole village was soon awake and, carrying the elderly people on their backs, members of 21 families scrambled to safety in a nearby field.
After two weeks of sheltering in tents, with no sign of any government help to rebuild or resettle, they reluctantly moved back into their broken homes, but unanimously agreed to leave the centuries-old settlement for a safer location by the end of the year.
Written by Words and photographs by Neelima Vallangi
This news first appeared on https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2025/nov/18/nepal-tibet-village-limi-valley-floods under the title “This Nepal village has survived for 1,000 years. Now recurring floods threaten its future”. Bolchha Nepal is not responsible or affiliated towards the opinion expressed in this news article.


