Nepal’s Wild West

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'Thirty out of every hundred men 1 in the village of Nawadurga in Dadeldhura District at the western edge of Nepal have permanently settled in India. Another thirty go to India on a seasonal basis every year looking for work. At least one member of every household in this village in remote far west corner of Nepal is out in India. Some in Punjab, some in Bombay, some in Delhi. "It's like a compulsion that people here think they have to go to India," says Siddharaj Bhatta who works as a social mobiliser in the village. "There's a certain prestige attached with men going to India. In fact, parents think twice before they agree to give their daughter's hand in marriage to a person who doesn't work in India. A man who says he works in Delhi will find a bride very easily!"

Gagan Singh Khati, an elderly villager, who himself never went across the border for work says that the general belief in the village is that one cannot earn a livelihood without India. "Why wouldn't they want to go?" he questions, "What kind of security does this place offer? This soil does not provide enough for us to sell. What is the incentive for them to linger here?" Bhana Dev Bhatta, another septuagenarian, has a slightly different view, "These people will want to go to India at the drop of a hat. They fail in the exams or they get a scolding, and they make a dash for the border!"

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