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HANGING off the edge of a 200ft cliff is a row of flimsy houses that are just a few inches away from plunging onto razor rocks.

Dubbed "Suicide Homes", these poorly built shacks are on the verge of dropping down - yet the locals who live inside refuse to move out.

A drone view shows a row of houses, locally known as ‘suicide homes’
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A drone view shows a row of houses, locally known as ‘suicide homes’Credit: Reuters
The homes are built on the edge of an earth cliff
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The homes are built on the edge of an earth cliffCredit: Reuters
At the bottom lies a large chunk of rocky escarpment, making the structures even more dangerous
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At the bottom lies a large chunk of rocky escarpment, making the structures even more dangerousCredit: Reuters

These dwellings with colourful rooftops are built in Bolivia's highland city of El Alto - and for a moment could distract viewers from the terrifying sight below.

They stand on the edge of the cliff which experts and city officials say is eroding.

And at the bottom lies a large chunk of rocky escarpment, making the structures even more dangerous.

The precarious homes often serve as workplaces for Aymara shamans, known as yatiris.

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They use the space inside these tiny box-sized rooms to make offerings to the Pachamama, or Earth Mother.

But torrential rains have increasingly weakened the buildings' foundations over the years.

Officials in the city have urged the shamans to vacate the homes immediately.

However, they are clinging on and refusing to move out because they think the Pachamama will protect them - leaving their lives hanging by a thread.

Gabriel Pari from the city's mayoral office said: "The precipice in this valley is 90 degrees.

"That is precisely why we want them to leave this place, if they do not want to leave we are going to have to use force."

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Refusing to move out, one yatiri Manuel Mamani said: "We are not going to move from this place, because this is our daily workplace.

"But we are going to take care of the soil, especially the rainwater, we are going to channel it so that the water goes somewhere else."

Nestled between the Andean mountains, El Alto offers a sheer landscape that attracts a lot of local visitors.

Local authorities even built cable cars to help people get around.

But the landscape is getting more treacherous as weather patterns become more extreme.

However, Gabriel Lopez Chiva, another yatiri, said he was confident that the Pachamama would protect him.

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He added: "We can do an offering ceremony, we do it as a payment and in this way, the land will never move because Pachamama needs an offering.

"It is like giving food and this way this place will not move. On the contrary, it will stabilize."

A cable car cabins pass over a row of houses
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A cable car cabins pass over a row of housesCredit: Reuters
The cliff has a 90-degree plunge
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The cliff has a 90-degree plungeCredit: Reuters
Local authorities have built cable cars to help people get around
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Local authorities have built cable cars to help people get aroundCredit: Reuters
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