The Sorry Saga of Bhutan's North

The Sorry Saga of Bhutan's North
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Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Stop 3rd country resettlement plan’

BY CHETAN ADHIKARI

DAMAK, Aug 11 - Following positive development on resolving the long-standing Bhutanese refugee problem during a meeting of Prime Ministers of Nepal and Bhutan during the SAARC summit, Bhutan Gorkha National Liberation Front (BGNLF) has called on various donor countries and International Organization for Migration (IOM) to stop third country resettlement process for the time being.
"We request IOM to stop the resettlement process at the moment as there are signs that the refugees' longing to return to their motherland can be fulfilled," said a press statement, signed by D R Kattel, acting chairman of BGNLF. It has also urged for simultaneous processes of repatriation and resettlement once the governments sit for dialogues.

The Front also quoted the Bhutan government's official online portal as saying that the Bhutanese government was ready to hold dialogues with the Nepal government after formation of new government.

"As the Bhutanese government showed readiness to solve the refugee crisis as soon as possible, we believe that the government of Nepal too will first act to solve the crisis before zeroing on in its own developmental works," the statement read.

The repatriation process was halted reportedly due to some "misunderstandings" between verification teams five years ago.

The question remains

BY NIRA GIRI TAMANG

During the 14th SAARC Summit in Delhi in 2007, the then prime minister of Bhutan, Khandu Wangchuck defended the institution of the monarchy as if the king had come down from a heavenly abode. For commoners, SAARC is a platform to commit and demonstrate national and collective development goals. Lauding the monarch beyond limits reflects a farcical democratic transition. The leaders either have lost their conscientiousness or are overtly colluding with the king to defeat the legitimate aspirants of democratic change. Organizations that are working for democratic transition and banned by Bhutan have accepted the king as ceremonial head. There is no reason to feel insecure if one truly believes in democracy.
Bhutan has always downplayed the demand for human rights and democratic change. History will never excuse the monarch for embracing an ethno-centric policy in order to survive. They claim to have granted equal rights to all the people, but they have actually excluded all those of other ethnicities. The essence of multiculturalism, which is a democratic aspiration and value, is absolutely absent in Bhutan.

The 15th SAARC summit provided little hope to the people in the region. Greater connectivity between people, relaxation of customs duties and trade barriers, food security, global terrorism, climate change, South Asian University, SAARC Development Fund and good governance are some of the pertinent issues that the people wanted their governments to take up during the Colombo Summit held from July 17-20, 2008.

The Charter of People's Assembly must be incorporated by the state machinery to make pro-people policies. Democracy can nurture the value of mankind and institutions that safeguard the rights of the people. South Asia has the potential for growth. The growth rate was 8 percent in the region. But the growth is uneven. The vast revenues generated are still used for the military while we continue to host half of the world's poor. The energy crisis is another issue of immediate concern. In this context, Pakistan and Afghanistan can contribute significantly by relaxing duties and expanding transit facilities to connect with central Asia. And in order for this happen, the nuclear states must continue their dialogue.

As far as Bhutan is concerned, Prime Minister Jigme Y Thinley made some positive remarks in Colombo. He has acknowledged the existence of terrorist activity in Bhutan. This acknowledgement proves that there is political unrest there. Bhutan has witnessed a series of low intensity bomb blasts in recent months. The United Revolutionary Front of Bhutan (URFB) has claimed responsibility for a number of them. The violence is a reflection of sheer frustration. More than 108,000 refugees have been languishing in exile in eastern Nepal for the last 18 years.

Bhutan continues to deny its multiethnic reality. No country can stamp out the cultural identity of any ethnic group in the name of a "one people policy". Bhutan has forcefully imposed the dress of the ruling elite as the national dress at the expense of other ethnic groups like the Lhotshampas.

A regional initiative for countering criminal activities has come up at the SAARC Summit – mutual assistance in criminal activities. But it is highly probable, as has been the tradition in Bhutan, that it might misuse this legal corpus to extradite dissident political activists. Bhutan entered into an extradition treaty with India in 1997 targeting persons whom they perceived as a threat. But the move proved futile because of the prompt response by social activists all over the world.

The present government must resolve the prolonged refugee fiasco. They must stop propagating "by the grace of the king… democracy has been handed over to people". Is democracy the king's private property? Democracy must develop from within and from the bottom up. The publicity that King Jigme Singye Wangchuck retired at the age of 51 to live in a log cabin is a sham.

This is a political gimmick. No one knows the truth about how he is embroiled in a power struggle with his four wives, 10 princes and princesses and an equal number of sisters and cousins. His abdication is mere eyewash. Both kings have shown their true colors with regard to racial discrimination when they used their prerogative (Article 2 of the Constitution) to nominate five members to the National Council. Not one was nominated from the Lhotshampa community.

Some of the remarks made by the Bhutanese prime minister at the SAARC Summit were both inspiring and discouraging. Bhutan does not possess the infrastructure to host a SAARC Summit, but the prime minister proposed to locate the secretariat of the SAARC Development Fund in the kingdom. There are many reasons behind this move. Bhutan is facing a severe foreign exchange crisis and needs Indian currency badly. A couple of months ago, it borrowed 200 crores from the State Bank of India, Hasimara, West Bengal by using US dollars as security against the loan. On July 17, Indian Prime Minster Dr Manmohan Singh assured 400 crores as assistance to keep the market stable.

Given the stringent visa regulations between India and Pakistan and the high levy on tourists in Bhutan, the best venue for the SAARC Development Fund is Nepal – a free state with an evolving history. Democracy must also be made a precondition for all member states and international communities before they enter into bilateral or multilateral agreements.

Despite all efforts to raise the refugee issue, it remains isolated in the minds of the South Asian heads of state. This has led Western countries to resettle them on their own soil on humanitarian grounds. Many refugees have left voluntarily for resettlement, and a large number of them are in the process of doing so. The question still remains: "Will resettlement bring ultimate justice to the refugees and lasting peace in the region?"

mediya_giri@hotmail.com

Yet Another Political Drama

Hari Prasad Adhikari


To keep the dic tatorship and ra cial discrimina
tion alive in Bhutan, King Jigme Singye Wangchuk and his son’s government are busy legitimising their ugly activities of governance, which have been continuous for about a century in different forms and model.
New drama At present, a new drama of a joint parliamentary session for the so-called first democratically-elected parliament and government is in process, and is to be recognised by the Indian government. The responsibility of directing this play is in the hands of King Jigme Kheshar Namgyal Wangchuk, with conditions that the very clauses that provide absolute power to the king and his family will not be altered. For this, the supporting role has been given to Jigme Y. Thinley and four members of his council of ministers.
According to the plans set up during the election drama, Thinley’s political party, the Druk Phuensum Tshokpa (DPT), was declared victorious by 95.7% votes (i.e., it won 45 out of the 47 seats) in the lower house of parliament. Can such a result be considered normal in a free and fair democratic election?
Thinley has 45 men and women as assistants in the showcase occupying the treasury bench, people who have been in different ministries and departments for the last 34 years of governance in Bhutan. All these members were high ranking army and police officials, body guards of the royal family members, royal advisory councillor, principal, vice- chancellor, directors, judges, secretaries, ministers and diplomats.
Among these bureaucrats are some Nepali faces who are not allowed to raise the issue of forceful eviction and racial discrimination, cultural and linguistic biasness, which have ruined the southern and eastern parts of Bhutan since 1992. Their intention of bringing some Nepalis and Sarchops in the parliament (Lhostampas were not included in the ministry since 1998-2008) is a tactic to wash away the stains of ethnic cleansing from the face of King Jigme Singye Wangchuk. These Nepali members have mortgaged their voice and conscience with the King through Thinley against the welfare of the public of their respective regions.
For example, Thakur Singh Paudel is the education minister and has good command of Nepali, English, Sarchop and Dzongkha languages. He is a good academician, but he is compelled to answer the questions raised in the assembly only in Dzongkha. His ethnic dress is banned in the offices. Due to such restrictions, many members from southern Bhutan, such as Prahlad Gurung, representative from Pagli constituency, are not in a position to take part in the debate of the National Assembly because they are poor in Dzongkha. Similarly, Justin Gurung from Chirang needs to twist his Nepali pronunciation like a Dzongkha speaker while speaking with media representatives.
Not only this, India’s role has been most helpful in playing such a drama in Bhutan. For instance, a high-level delegation comprising of the prime minister of India and his principal secretary, security advisor, foreign secretary and joint secretary visited Thimphu, Tala and Punakha from May 16-17. During the visit, the delegation announced New Delhi would lend a helping hand to implement the 10th five-year plan of the King’s government without attaching conditions for the removal of racism and despotism.
Prime Minister Dr. Man Mohan Singh addressed the joint session of parliament and laid the foundation stone at Punasangchu for the construction of the 1,095 MW hydro-electricity power project. Punasangchu will be the biggest hydro-electric power plant in Bhutan, in which four out of the 20 districts will be affected by the project. Among these, hundreds of villages of Chirang, Kalikhola and Dagapela will be under water once the dam is completed. These districts belong to thousands of Lhotsampas who were forcefully evicted in 1992 and not allowed to return.
As a result, these Bhutanese have been compelled to accept third country settlement in Europe and America. This foundation stone is archeological evidence to show India’s involvement in the ethnic cleansing of Bhutanese of Nepali origin to fulfill its self-interest.
On the way to supporting the Bhutanese despot, the Government of India’s definition and views regarding democracy have been arbitrary since 1968. They branded the absolute king as a democrat of the world. This time, too, personalities in the governing corridor of India are all praise for the so-called Bhutanese democracy. It has been crystal clear to the world by now that the Bhutanese king is not far from the feudal lords of ancient times.
Unfortunately, without addressing the ethnic cleansing issue and repatriation of Bhutanese refugees, several bills have been tabled in parliament, such as the draft of the constitution of Bhutan, election bill and national referendum bill. There will be no difficulty in passing them as Thinley, the party president of the DPT, has already made arrangements and allotted the topic and text to be spoken in the assembly to his fellow party men. Therefore, whatever bills are in the pipeline for discussion are mere gimmicks and eye washing tactics.
Real democracy
Looking at these realities, the international community and Government of India need to review the matter very honestly. They need to take appropriate measures to ensure real democracy, where citizens of different ethnicity can be accommodated. Lastly, third country settlement and artificial democracy and parliament are not lasting solutions. It is only a periodic interval of reunion and a preparatory ground for the next revolution.
(Adhikari is former National Assembly member of Bhutan)

Dr Singh's visit to Bhutan

By Hari Prasad Adhikari

Dr Manmohan Singh is the second prime minister of India who visited Bhutan after the latter adopted a policy of ethnic cleansing. King Jigme Singye Wangchuk (KJSW) evicted over one hundred thousand people from southern Bhutan in the late 1980s. Since then, the king has denied the right of the refugees to return to their country because the KJSW still holds the power. He doesn't want to destroy his model.
Jigme Kheshar Namgyal Wangchuk is the incumbent king of Bhutan but his official coronation is yet to take place. In this regard, international recognition and India's support is very crucial. Perhaps, Dr Singh's visit may be taken as novel conscience for official recognition until the apology and promise for repatriation of the refugees does not come from the KJSW or his son -- Jigme Kheshar Namgyal Wangchuk.

Some 16 years ago, the late PV Narasimha Rao, the then prime minister of India, visited Bhutan to sign both phases of the memorandum of understanding (MOU) for the Tala Hydroelectric project ignoring the bitter truth of ongoing ethnic cleansing. This is the biggest ever project in Bhutan. It was constructed and completed during the period of ethnic cleansing. Both the visiting prime ministers are members of India's National Congress, which has always been vociferous against any sort of racial discrimination in the past elsewhere in the world.

Between 1992 and 2008, King Jigme Singe Wangchuk made several political dramas to conceal the current ethnic cleansing and despotism. He declared no confident motion against him without removing the provision of Tsa Wa Sum (the three main elements of Bhutan -- king, the country and people) in which no one was/ is allowed to act and speak against these elements where king's place was/ is on top priority. Failing at the first attempt, he then inducted a team of confidents into the Council of Ministers and ordered to vote in their favor in the National Assembly.

Amidst all such political drama, he appointed 11 prime ministers in less than ten years. Fortunately, Delhi neither invited them to visit India nor Indian premier visited Bhutan during this period which in turn exerted significant pressure on the Bhutanese monarch though several foreign ministers of India and army generals visited Thimphu to show India's keen interest of working with the king.

In this regard, statement of former minister of external affairs Kunwar Natwar Singh and present foreign minister Pranav Mukharjee's comments were remarkable. The former said the purpose of his visit to Bhutan was to strengthen the system of monarchy while the latter said, "when the size of Bhutanese refugees in the camps in Nepal will be reduced by resettling in Europe and America, then India will come forward to defuse the refugee crisis." Aren't these comments too awkward from the foreign ministers of the largest democracy?

Keeping Kunwar Natwar Singh's comment at the top, KJSW and his son's government are preparing to promulgate the constitution of Bhutan where the king and his family will be the supreme and their legitimacy will be unquestionable and stronger.

Furthermore, the constitution safeguards the interests of the king and his royal family. No citizen of Bhutan is free to speak his or her language, preserve culture, worship, and own property. In fact, an ethnic Nepali speaker cannot send his or her children to government schools without the consent of a local government official. Nor can an ethnic Nepali speaker run any sort of business in any part of Bhutan, let alone practice of religion or preservation of culture.

It creates different tiers of people through the provision of yellow, red, green and white Kabney (shawl) holders. And the ones at the top hardly come under the court and seek justice. Members of parliament are compelled to bow before the king and high ranking officials according to their rank of Kabney. The prime minister, chief justice, Chief Election Commissioner and speakers of both the houses are the channels who obey the order of the king and are mere devices to legalize the illegal work of their masters.

Analyzing the above fact, it is very sad to say that India's Chief Election Commissioner, including several officials who were invited to give feedback on the draft constitution of Bhutan, were not successful to remove such discriminatory provisions where the king and his stooges are above the constitution.

However, it is worth mentioning that the political document was presented officially to Dr Manmohan Singh and Dr APJ Abdul Kalam by the king of Bhutan before bringing to its present shape. Unfortunately, feedback of these two novel personalities is yet to be known. Can Dr Singh come forward openly in favor of real democracy? Did he advise the king to correct the document so that it becomes acceptable to all ethnic groups? Is Dr Singh bold enough to speak out the truth so that the Druk dictator removes the discriminatory provisions in the constitution?

If not, the same constitution will be enforced under the leadership of new King Jigme Kheshar Namgyal Wangchuk in the upper house without addressing the root-cause of Bhutanese political crises such as absence of real democracy and human rights along with the restitution of properties of political victims and the repatriation of Bhutanese refugees and release of prisoners of conscience.

In addition, prohibition of 150 thousand Bhutanese to return their country is the subject of international concern.

Although Dr Singh spoke nothing about the plight of the refugees, let us hope Dr Singh understands the stark reality and corrects the past mistake of not supporting the demand of democratic reform in Bhutan. Last but not the least, if the Indian prime minister fails to notice the racial discriminatory against the ethnic minority in Bhutan, then India's prestige of regional power also needs to be questioned.

Obviously, it fits every conscience to think that American and European parliaments from overseas have already taken decisive steps. The third country settlement plan suggests that Europe and America are keen to resolve the regional problems as democratic India has failed to act.

(The writer is former National Assembly member of Bhutan)

Dr Singh's visit to Bhutan

By Hari Prasad Adhikari

Dr Manmohan Singh is the second prime minister of India who visited Bhutan after the latter adopted a policy of ethnic cleansing. King Jigme Singye Wangchuk (KJSW) evicted over one hundred thousand people from southern Bhutan in the late 1980s. Since then, the king has denied the right of the refugees to return to their country because the KJSW still holds the power. He doesn't want to destroy his model.
Jigme Kheshar Namgyal Wangchuk is the incumbent king of Bhutan but his official coronation is yet to take place. In this regard, international recognition and India's support is very crucial. Perhaps, Dr Singh's visit may be taken as novel conscience for official recognition until the apology and promise for repatriation of the refugees does not come from the KJSW or his son -- Jigme Kheshar Namgyal Wangchuk.

Some 16 years ago, the late PV Narasimha Rao, the then prime minister of India, visited Bhutan to sign both phases of the memorandum of understanding (MOU) for the Tala Hydroelectric project ignoring the bitter truth of ongoing ethnic cleansing. This is the biggest ever project in Bhutan. It was constructed and completed during the period of ethnic cleansing. Both the visiting prime ministers are members of India's National Congress, which has always been vociferous against any sort of racial discrimination in the past elsewhere in the world.

Between 1992 and 2008, King Jigme Singe Wangchuk made several political dramas to conceal the current ethnic cleansing and despotism. He declared no confident motion against him without removing the provision of Tsa Wa Sum (the three main elements of Bhutan -- king, the country and people) in which no one was/ is allowed to act and speak against these elements where king's place was/ is on top priority. Failing at the first attempt, he then inducted a team of confidents into the Council of Ministers and ordered to vote in their favor in the National Assembly.

Amidst all such political drama, he appointed 11 prime ministers in less than ten years. Fortunately, Delhi neither invited them to visit India nor Indian premier visited Bhutan during this period which in turn exerted significant pressure on the Bhutanese monarch though several foreign ministers of India and army generals visited Thimphu to show India's keen interest of working with the king.

In this regard, statement of former minister of external affairs Kunwar Natwar Singh and present foreign minister Pranav Mukharjee's comments were remarkable. The former said the purpose of his visit to Bhutan was to strengthen the system of monarchy while the latter said, "when the size of Bhutanese refugees in the camps in Nepal will be reduced by resettling in Europe and America, then India will come forward to defuse the refugee crisis." Aren't these comments too awkward from the foreign ministers of the largest democracy?

Keeping Kunwar Natwar Singh's comment at the top, KJSW and his son's government are preparing to promulgate the constitution of Bhutan where the king and his family will be the supreme and their legitimacy will be unquestionable and stronger.

Furthermore, the constitution safeguards the interests of the king and his royal family. No citizen of Bhutan is free to speak his or her language, preserve culture, worship, and own property. In fact, an ethnic Nepali speaker cannot send his or her children to government schools without the consent of a local government official. Nor can an ethnic Nepali speaker run any sort of business in any part of Bhutan, let alone practice of religion or preservation of culture.

It creates different tiers of people through the provision of yellow, red, green and white Kabney (shawl) holders. And the ones at the top hardly come under the court and seek justice. Members of parliament are compelled to bow before the king and high ranking officials according to their rank of Kabney. The prime minister, chief justice, Chief Election Commissioner and speakers of both the houses are the channels who obey the order of the king and are mere devices to legalize the illegal work of their masters.

Analyzing the above fact, it is very sad to say that India's Chief Election Commissioner, including several officials who were invited to give feedback on the draft constitution of Bhutan, were not successful to remove such discriminatory provisions where the king and his stooges are above the constitution.

However, it is worth mentioning that the political document was presented officially to Dr Manmohan Singh and Dr APJ Abdul Kalam by the king of Bhutan before bringing to its present shape. Unfortunately, feedback of these two novel personalities is yet to be known. Can Dr Singh come forward openly in favor of real democracy? Did he advise the king to correct the document so that it becomes acceptable to all ethnic groups? Is Dr Singh bold enough to speak out the truth so that the Druk dictator removes the discriminatory provisions in the constitution?

If not, the same constitution will be enforced under the leadership of new King Jigme Kheshar Namgyal Wangchuk in the upper house without addressing the root-cause of Bhutanese political crises such as absence of real democracy and human rights along with the restitution of properties of political victims and the repatriation of Bhutanese refugees and release of prisoners of conscience.

In addition, prohibition of 150 thousand Bhutanese to return their country is the subject of international concern.

Although Dr Singh spoke nothing about the plight of the refugees, let us hope Dr Singh understands the stark reality and corrects the past mistake of not supporting the demand of democratic reform in Bhutan. Last but not the least, if the Indian prime minister fails to notice the racial discriminatory against the ethnic minority in Bhutan, then India's prestige of regional power also needs to be questioned.

Obviously, it fits every conscience to think that American and European parliaments from overseas have already taken decisive steps. The third country settlement plan suggests that Europe and America are keen to resolve the regional problems as democratic India has failed to act.

(The writer is former National Assembly member of Bhutan)

Nepalese Minority Skeptical of Bhutan’s Democracy

Monday, 26 May 2008, 11:31 am
Column: Adam C Castillo


Bhutan’s Nepalese Minority Skeptical of Country’s Democracy

By Adam C. Castillo
21 May 2008: Bhutan, the last Shangri-La, and until recently a bastion of monarchical fidelity, to everyone’s surprise held the nations first elections earlier this year ushering in a new era of democracy. This development comes as a shock because it was not the will of the people that agitated such a change but a royal edict made by the King himself. The Bhutanese, who hold their royalty in enlightened esteem, have in fact been skeptical of this whole process of democratization. The election’s 80% turnout may be attributed not to the people’s enthusiasm for change but rather to their filial obedience to royal dictates, which ironically in this case has effectually, if only superficially, limited the power of the crown in which they trust so much.


It was in 2005 that then King, Jigme Singye Wangchuck, announced that he would abdicate the throne to his son, the crown prince Jigme Khesar Namgyal Wangchuck, and that popular elections to select members of a new bicameral legislative body would take place in 2008. The elections for the National Council (upper house) and National Assembly (lower house) were held on December 31-January 1 and March 24, 2008 respectively. Despite the region’s bloody struggles for democracy as seen in Pakistan, Nepal, and Myanmar, Bhutan’s transition went quite smoothly, however not without incident.

On January 20, bomb blasts went off in the capital city of Thimphu and three other locations around the country. The United Revolutionary Front of Bhutan, a Maoist guerilla group based in southern Bhutan with ties to similar groups in Nepal claimed responsibility for the bombings. Though no lives were lost in any of the four incidents, the URFB hoped to send a clear message that the new democratic process in Bhutan is in fact tainted and anything but inclusionary.

An estimated 82,000 people, or around 12% of the population, most of whom ethnic Nepalis, were excluded from the 2008 elections due to their status as “non-nationals” according a 2005 national census. An even greater number, over 100,000 Lhotshampas, the Nepalese minority living mainly in Bhutan’s south, were physically expelled or forced to flee the country in the early 1990’s and live today as stateless refugees in seven UNHCR-sponsored camps in eastern Nepal. These factors along with the barring of a third party from participating in the recent elections have brought into question the viability of Bhutan’s commitment to pluralism, an integral part of any inclusionary democratic system.

Bhutan is split into two distinct regions both geographically and culturally. The north is the traditional Buddhist kingdom of our imaginations tucked into the glacial wilderness of the Himalayas. In the south are subtropical lowlands once thought to be uninhabitable due to the region’s vulnerability to choleric and malarial outbreaks. Eventually migrants from neighboring, largely Hindu countries, including a large number from Nepal, came to populate this southern portion of Bhutan.

For hundreds of years the country’s Lhotshampa population coexisted in relative peace with Bhutan’s dominant Drukpa population and remained largely autonomous. The Lhotshampas managed to retain their strikingly different Nepalese culture, language, and religious traditions.

Despite being in a region clamoring for democracy in the wake of India’s political evolution, Bhutan’s monarchy remained intact and unthreatened by outside influences. It was not until the 1970’s that the growing Lhotshampa population became an immediate concern to Bhutan’s ruling elite. They hoped to avoid the fate of neighboring Sikkim, whose monarch was ousted in 1975 by a Nepalese majority in a plebiscite, which made Sikkim an Indian state. By 1980, the number of Lhotshampa in Bhutan was estimated at near 30% of the country’s total population. Revolutionary rhetoric was rife in the region at the time and the Bhutanese government feared an influx of dissonant ideals pertaining to political restructuring, ideals gaining popularity amongst Nepalese populations in the region.

This outside influence began to show itself in the form of demonstrations organized by Lhotshampas calling for democracy in Bhutan. To counter this threat and to bolster Bhutanese cultural solidarity, legislation was passed in 1985 that called for a “one nation, one people” campaign which aimed to standardize the structure of society and cleanse it of any foreign interference. Mandates were made enforcing a strict national dress code of traditional Drukpa garb. Nepali language was banned in schools and public areas and Lhotshampas, traditionally Hindu, were ordered to adopt the official state religion of Vajrayana Buddhism. Television was banned, internal travel was regulated and the little foreign trade that existed at the time was curtailed.

In 1989, new criteria for citizenship was enforced which excluded anyone who could not prove their being a resident of Bhutan prior to 1958, a stipulation made almost impossible considering the pervasive illiteracy among Lhotshampa populations and that few had thought to register their residency with government agencies. The new laws stripped nearly one-sixth of Bhutan’s population of its citizenship. Massive protests and violent clashes between Lhotshampas and Drukpas ensued.

The government’s crackdown was swift and severe. Bhutanese security forces began the process of expelling non-citizens, making them first renounce their homes and homeland and systematically escorting them across Bhutan’s borders. Those who were not forcibly expelled were pressured to flee under threats of arrest and further harassment. The exodus into Nepal continued until the mid nineties.

Per-capita, it remains the world’s largest refugee displacement. After 16 years and 15 rounds of bilateral talks between Bhutan and Nepal not one refugee has had their citizenship reinstated or been let to reenter the country. The United States has recently offered to resettle 60,000 of the refugees in the coming years. Those willing to accept such a compromise face harassment and intimidation from other refugees in the camps who demand nothing less than a plan for comprehensive repatriation back to their homes in Bhutan. The recent elections, having propelled the country into a new era of democracy without the participation of a, what once was, sizable portion of the population speaks volumes about the state of limbo in which these refugees exist and to the bleakness of their prospects to ever get back to their homes where so much has changed without them.


*************
www.bhootan.org attemps to reach out to as many people as possible and provide information on Bhutan.

Nepalese Minority Skeptical of Bhutan’s Democracy

Monday, 26 May 2008, 11:31 am
Column: Adam C Castillo


Bhutan’s Nepalese Minority Skeptical of Country’s Democracy

By Adam C. Castillo
21 May 2008: Bhutan, the last Shangri-La, and until recently a bastion of monarchical fidelity, to everyone’s surprise held the nations first elections earlier this year ushering in a new era of democracy. This development comes as a shock because it was not the will of the people that agitated such a change but a royal edict made by the King himself. The Bhutanese, who hold their royalty in enlightened esteem, have in fact been skeptical of this whole process of democratization. The election’s 80% turnout may be attributed not to the people’s enthusiasm for change but rather to their filial obedience to royal dictates, which ironically in this case has effectually, if only superficially, limited the power of the crown in which they trust so much.


It was in 2005 that then King, Jigme Singye Wangchuck, announced that he would abdicate the throne to his son, the crown prince Jigme Khesar Namgyal Wangchuck, and that popular elections to select members of a new bicameral legislative body would take place in 2008. The elections for the National Council (upper house) and National Assembly (lower house) were held on December 31-January 1 and March 24, 2008 respectively. Despite the region’s bloody struggles for democracy as seen in Pakistan, Nepal, and Myanmar, Bhutan’s transition went quite smoothly, however not without incident.

On January 20, bomb blasts went off in the capital city of Thimphu and three other locations around the country. The United Revolutionary Front of Bhutan, a Maoist guerilla group based in southern Bhutan with ties to similar groups in Nepal claimed responsibility for the bombings. Though no lives were lost in any of the four incidents, the URFB hoped to send a clear message that the new democratic process in Bhutan is in fact tainted and anything but inclusionary.

An estimated 82,000 people, or around 12% of the population, most of whom ethnic Nepalis, were excluded from the 2008 elections due to their status as “non-nationals” according a 2005 national census. An even greater number, over 100,000 Lhotshampas, the Nepalese minority living mainly in Bhutan’s south, were physically expelled or forced to flee the country in the early 1990’s and live today as stateless refugees in seven UNHCR-sponsored camps in eastern Nepal. These factors along with the barring of a third party from participating in the recent elections have brought into question the viability of Bhutan’s commitment to pluralism, an integral part of any inclusionary democratic system.

Bhutan is split into two distinct regions both geographically and culturally. The north is the traditional Buddhist kingdom of our imaginations tucked into the glacial wilderness of the Himalayas. In the south are subtropical lowlands once thought to be uninhabitable due to the region’s vulnerability to choleric and malarial outbreaks. Eventually migrants from neighboring, largely Hindu countries, including a large number from Nepal, came to populate this southern portion of Bhutan.

For hundreds of years the country’s Lhotshampa population coexisted in relative peace with Bhutan’s dominant Drukpa population and remained largely autonomous. The Lhotshampas managed to retain their strikingly different Nepalese culture, language, and religious traditions.

Despite being in a region clamoring for democracy in the wake of India’s political evolution, Bhutan’s monarchy remained intact and unthreatened by outside influences. It was not until the 1970’s that the growing Lhotshampa population became an immediate concern to Bhutan’s ruling elite. They hoped to avoid the fate of neighboring Sikkim, whose monarch was ousted in 1975 by a Nepalese majority in a plebiscite, which made Sikkim an Indian state. By 1980, the number of Lhotshampa in Bhutan was estimated at near 30% of the country’s total population. Revolutionary rhetoric was rife in the region at the time and the Bhutanese government feared an influx of dissonant ideals pertaining to political restructuring, ideals gaining popularity amongst Nepalese populations in the region.

This outside influence began to show itself in the form of demonstrations organized by Lhotshampas calling for democracy in Bhutan. To counter this threat and to bolster Bhutanese cultural solidarity, legislation was passed in 1985 that called for a “one nation, one people” campaign which aimed to standardize the structure of society and cleanse it of any foreign interference. Mandates were made enforcing a strict national dress code of traditional Drukpa garb. Nepali language was banned in schools and public areas and Lhotshampas, traditionally Hindu, were ordered to adopt the official state religion of Vajrayana Buddhism. Television was banned, internal travel was regulated and the little foreign trade that existed at the time was curtailed.

In 1989, new criteria for citizenship was enforced which excluded anyone who could not prove their being a resident of Bhutan prior to 1958, a stipulation made almost impossible considering the pervasive illiteracy among Lhotshampa populations and that few had thought to register their residency with government agencies. The new laws stripped nearly one-sixth of Bhutan’s population of its citizenship. Massive protests and violent clashes between Lhotshampas and Drukpas ensued.

The government’s crackdown was swift and severe. Bhutanese security forces began the process of expelling non-citizens, making them first renounce their homes and homeland and systematically escorting them across Bhutan’s borders. Those who were not forcibly expelled were pressured to flee under threats of arrest and further harassment. The exodus into Nepal continued until the mid nineties.

Per-capita, it remains the world’s largest refugee displacement. After 16 years and 15 rounds of bilateral talks between Bhutan and Nepal not one refugee has had their citizenship reinstated or been let to reenter the country. The United States has recently offered to resettle 60,000 of the refugees in the coming years. Those willing to accept such a compromise face harassment and intimidation from other refugees in the camps who demand nothing less than a plan for comprehensive repatriation back to their homes in Bhutan. The recent elections, having propelled the country into a new era of democracy without the participation of a, what once was, sizable portion of the population speaks volumes about the state of limbo in which these refugees exist and to the bleakness of their prospects to ever get back to their homes where so much has changed without them.


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www.bhootan.org attemps to reach out to as many people as possible and provide information on Bhutan.

Refugees adjusting to new life in US

By DEEPAK ADHIKARI

PITTSBURGH, USA, April 30 - For 17 years, the Odari family was among more than 107,000 Bhutanese refugees in camps scattered over the southeastern plains of Nepal, hoping to return to their rightful place: Bhutan.
The nine-member family shared a small hut with thatched roof and dirt floor with no electricity, running water, toilet or kitchen. They lived on sparse rations of rice, lentils, vegetables, salt, sugar and oil distributed twice a month by United Nations agencies, but the food was never enough to fill their hungry bellies.

Then on April 9, three members of the Odari family arrived in Pittsburgh to start a new life.

"We were having a tough time in the refugee camp. We're happy to be here," said a beaming Man Maya, 25, who is living with her younger sister, Yani Maya, 22, and brother, Dilli Prasad, 20, in an apartment at Prospect Park in Whitehall.

Last night, their elderly parents, two more brothers -- one 24 and disabled and another 17, and two other sisters, 21 and 25, were expected to arrive here to join them.

The family's relocation is being assisted by Catholic Charities of the Diocese of Pittsburgh.

Man Maya was only 9 when she was forced to leave Bhutan with her parents and other family members. They were among the 120,000 Nepali-speaking Bhutanese -- mostly Hindu and Buddhist -- who were evicted from Bhutan in the late 1980s and early '90s when the Bhutanese rulers forced them to wear traditional dress, required that they speak the Dzongkha language and deprived many of citizenship. Protests against the stringent rules resulted in the mass exodus of tens of thousands to neighboring India.

India, in turn, forced most of them to enter Nepal, which does not share a border with Bhutan.

The Odaris lived in a Beldangi refugee camp -- one of seven camps run by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). In some camps, many children died from the lack of health care and the scorching climate in the plains.

"At times, there were 14 funerals a day," said Kishor Pradhan, a board member at Association of Bhutanese in America. Mr. Pradhan, who has been living north of Pittsburgh in New Castle for nine months, sought refugee status in the United States three years ago.

The United States has offered to resettle 60,000 of the 107,000 of the refugees. Six other countries -- Australia, Canada, Norway, the Netherlands, New Zealand and Denmark -- have offered to resettle the rest.

"After 17 years of suffering, the day has come for the Bhutanese to start fresh," said Mr. Pradhan, a senior quality analyst at Coventry Healthcare in Cranberry. "There is now a ray of hope for the refugees because numerous attempts to repatriate to Bhutan have failed."

The International Organization for Migration is screening and transporting the refugees. The United States plans to resettle 10,000 by the end of 2008, many going to New York, Maryland, Arizona, Missouri, Illinois and other places.

Dilli Prasad Odari said all of his family decided to resettle in the United States. "In camps we had to rely on UNHCR for our daily needs. But here we can live on our own, and it's also good for future generation," he said. Some of his other relatives have been resettled in Texas.

The family is gradually becoming accustomed to their new surroundings in the Whitehall area in the South Hills.

They are taking English classes in the mornings. They received health screenings shortly after their arrival. They also received food assistance to shop at Wal-Mart.

Even though he's 20, Mr. Odari last attended 10th grade in the refugee camp and hopes to further his education here. He likes to compare Pittsburgh with Ilam, a city in the eastern highland of Nepal that has similar topography. A lover of Nepali music, he has brought a collection of the Nepali lyrics. "But I'm dying to listen Nepali songs," he said.

Man Maya, a high school graduate, said it's hard to keep connected with her loved ones across the ocean. "It's hard to make phone calls to Nepal," she said.

Yani Maya is a little worried about finding work. "I hope we'll be able to work after four months," she said.

"They seem happy and are feeling good about being here," said John Miller, director of refugee services for Catholic Charities. His organization is resettling a total of 170 refugees in 2008.

Catholic Charities also provides core services such as applying for Social Security cards, medical screening, enrollment in English language training, employment counseling and orientation to the refugees. According to Mr. Miller, Catholic Charities provides its services for five years after they arrive. Catholic Charities in Pittsburgh also has helped resettle Vietnamese, Burmese, Sudanese, Somalian, Burundian, Iraqi, Meskhetian Turks (from the former Soviet Union) and Haitian refugees.

"Each refugee group has a different set of challenges," Mr. Miller said. "They have struggles but they also have emotional and psychological issues."

Mr. Odari hopes more Bhutanese will be resettled in Pittsburgh. "It feels good to be here but I'm also missing my friends in Nepal," he said, adding that he is developing friendships with young Burmese refugees in the neighborhood.
He's learning the bus routes of the city and has learned how to follow maps to visit places.

On a recent afternoon, when he saw a deer in the nearby woods, he was thrilled.
Eventually he hopes to return for a visit to Nepal to see the place where he said he has spent "some of the hardest times of my life."


Courtesy : Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Refugees are in a state of flux

By Narayan Sharma

The Bhutanese refugees, stranded in one of the most protracted-refugee situations, have finally opted for the Third-Country Settlement (TCS) in large numbers. The fight for repatriation for the last 17 years has been inconsequential insofar as that has borne them no return whatsoever.
A three-dimensional approach involving a sincere commitment on the part of the Druk regime, a cogent and a coherent refugee policy on the part of Nepal and an active participatory role of the international community, including India, would have been a way out towards locating a comprehensive durable solution. With none in track, refugees have opted for the third country resettlement plan.

The 17 years of ordeal have witnessed a phenomenal change: The refugees have been classified into 4 categories by Nepal and Bhutan, in their perusal of bilateralism. Bhutan had its goal defined: to preempt the possible return of refugees. And politics of classification was actually a strategic move towards that end. What coerced the then democratic Nepal to grant legitimacy to Bhutan’s ploy is unknown. It has benefited Nepal in no way. One of the bizarre outcomes of classification has been to brand thousands of innocent refugees terrorists. They include many children below 10 years of age!

Back in Bhutan, a constitution was drafted and subsequently “endorsed” by the citizenry. While Bhutan observers were busy lauding the commitment to democracy of the fourth king, over 1/6 citizens were losing their right to return. The international community ignored the clandestine agenda of the king perpetrated through the constitution in the garb of democratizing the Bhutanese polity.

Bhutan’s constitution remains a bizarre exclusionary document, framed with criminal intent of de-Bhutanizing the refugees in particular and excluding the southern Bhutanese from the mainstream political process in general. How could one explain the exclusion of a third political party formed in Bhutan, the exclusion of over 80,000 southern Bhutanese from the electoral roll in the recently concluded elections, let alone excluding the refugees and the political parties in exile?

A new “democratic” government is in place in Bhutan, led by staunch royalist Jigme Y Thinley, an infamous refugee bully. Refugees’ hope of return has been lessened presently as the Druk regime has now the possibility to further procrastinate the issue with the new-found alibi of people’s representatives needing to decide the issue.

The host Nepal has witnessed the most phenomenal changes, with the Maoists inching towards making the next government. They have, inter alia, the challenge of defining the Bhutan policy vis-à-vis the refugee issue. Their ideological tilt might warrant them forestall the process of TCS, but will that be a politically expedient course for them to adopt, when the United States and other core countries, including a number of international organizations, have invested quite heavily in the process? It is time the Maoists defined their refugee policy.

A solution to any refugee problem involves certain essentialities. It needs to balance the right of people to return on the one hand and respect their informed decision on the other. A voluntary and informed decision is possible only when all the options available are availed of. The TCS offer presently underway is being exercised sans other options, namely local integration and repatriation. This is explanatory of the possibility that refugees might be opting for TCS owing more to push factors like, augmenting frustration in the protracted refugee situation, insecurity of life, depleting assistance, amongst others, than available pull factors.

It is to be remembered that 2007 was a tumultuous year in the life of the refugees. They lost quite a few lives to the bullets of Indian security forces during the course of their peace march to Bhutan. The year also witnessed an increased animosity between the refugees wishing to opt for TCS and those championing for repatriation, especially under the aegis of the newly formed leftist forces in exile.

The credit of all stakeholders that the security situation in the camps have been efficiently taken care of and one ardently hopes that the Maoist government ensures the wellbeing and security of all the refugees in and outside the camps.

The impacts of emergence of a new government in Nepal are yet to be felt vis-à-vis the Bhutanese refugees. Some issues of critical concern emerge. And it is on the new dispensation in Nepal to appropriately address them.

Will the Maoists reverse the refugee policy adopted by the outgoing government? If so, that would mean forestalling the TCS process underway which however is fraught with the propensity of generating greater catastrophe and in turn discrediting the Maoists. Together with the agenda of New Nepal, the new government has an important role to play in taking the Bhutanese refugee situation to an acceptable, logical conclusion. Will not the change in host Nepal embolden their ideological Bhutanese brethren who might push through their own agenda more vociferously against the wishes of many who would wish to settle abroad? What policy would the Maoists adopt in case of such an eventuality?

A comprehensive solution package for the refugees should break the refugee deadlock. While continuing with the TCR process, efforts towards enabling a dignified repatriation of all the willing refugees should be initiated. That tests the diplomatic skills of the new dispensation as the process entails dealing with an escapist New Delhi and a hawkish Bhutanese prime minister whose refugee approach has been outrageous all through.

ruleoflaws@gmail.com

Refugees warn of Bhutan's new tide of ethnic expulsions


Refugees warn of Bhutan's new tide of ethnic expulsionsHimalayan kingdom's Shangri-la image is a myth, says tortured activistEd Douglas in Katmandu The Observer, Sunday April 20 2008 Article history



A Bhutanese refugee looks from a bamboo hut in the Ti Mai camp, Nepal. Photograph: Desmond Boylan/Reuters

The small Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan is hailed as the last Shangri-la in a region plagued by conflict and poverty. Attracted by its policy of Gross National Happiness, Western media have held up the country's apparently peaceful transition to democracy as a model of wise governance by a Buddhist regime protecting its culture from the ravages of consumerism.

But behind its facade of otherworldly charm, Bhutan holds a secret. Twenty years ago, its monarchy, threatened by an increase in Bhutan's ethnic Nepalese population, hit on a simple solution: ethnic cleansing. Families who had been living in Bhutan for generations were stripped of their citizenship. One hundred thousand Hindu Bhutanese - around one sixth of the country's entire population - were driven into exile and their land redistributed among the Drukpas, Bhutan's Buddhist elite.

Now a combination of divisions among the refugees, renewed tension inside Bhutan and the surprise election victory by Maoists in Nepal, is threatening a plan that finally gives hope to 107,000 refugees who have been languishing in camps in eastern Nepal for the last 17 years. Tens of thousands of unregistered refugees are living stateless and in abject poverty in Nepal and India.

There are also fears among exiled Bhutanese leaders that a new wave of expulsions from the remaining ethnic Nepalese population, called Lhotshampas, is imminent. 'The process is happening already,' said Ratan Gazmere, a leading human rights activist and a refugee himself. 'But I cannot convince the international community of that.'

Gazmere, who was tortured and jailed for two years in the capital Thimpu, said widespread discrimination continues inside the country.

Lhotshampas are denied education and in the last census, held in 2005, around 13 per cent of the whole population of Bhutan, most of them Nepalese, were classified as 'non-nationals'. As a result, 82,000 Bhutanese were denied a vote in last month's first-ever general election. Non-nationals, lacking an identity card, are not allowed freedom of movement or to start a business.

Paradoxically, it is a potential solution to the crisis that seems to have tipped the Lhotshampa community into fresh uncertainty. In 2006, with the international community facing an apparently endless bill for maintaining the refugee camps, an agreement was reached whereby some refugees would be resettled in the West while others would stay in Nepal and pressure would be brought on the Bhutanese government to allow others to return.

The US assistant secretary of state Ellen Sauerbrey said her country would offer citizenship to 60,000 of the refugees. Other countries, including Canada, have stepped in with similar offers.

With the prospect of around half of the refugees leaving the camps, leaders fear pressure on Bhutan to allow the rest home will evaporate. Put simply, they say, the government of Bhutan will be rewarded for its ethnic cleansing.

Extremists in the camps, including a new Maoist organisation, have allegedly threatened refugees not to apply to leave for the US. Gazmere echoes human rights groups who say refugees must be allowed to make up their own minds. 'My concern is that the refugees should not suffer more than they already have,' he said.

Disaffected young Lhotshampas who have grown up in the camps or suffered discrimination in southern Bhutan are turning to violence. Several bombs exploded in Bhutan in January, including one in Thimpu. Although no one was killed, the escalation resulted in Bhutanese security forces shooting dead five men they described as Maoists.

Now Bhutanese leaders in exile are adjusting to the prospect of a Maoist government in Katmandu that may not welcome what it regards as American interference in the region. The US still classifies the Maoists as a terrorist organisation.

'The Maoists will try to destabilise the resettlement process,' said Gazmere, 'because Americans are involved.' Other Bhutanese leaders disagreed, arguing that Maoist leaders in Nepal have warned them not to expect support.

The question remains how Bhutan got away with such a large-scale expulsion of its own citizens. A recent report by the Norwegian Refugee Council blames the world's media for helping 'perpetuate the myth of an exotic land of happiness. However, what we have before us is a silent tragedy occurring in a media-created Shangri-la.'

Ratan Gazmere said Bhutan's close relationship with India was critical. India had shielded Bhutan in return for access to hydro-power and timber.The Bhutanese had shut down camps in the south hat were used by the United Liberation Front of Assam to launch attacks across the border. 'India doesn't want to push Bhutan too hard,' Gazmere said.

Bhutani refugees

Editorial in Samaya, 30 June


World Refugee Day came and went this week, and it was just a formality. For the 100,000 plus Bhutani refugees who have been living in camps for the past 14 years in Jhapa and Morang there is no hope of any positive developments this year.

The UNHCR which has been trying to get the refugees repatriated to Bhutan or assimilated in the host country Nepal is now also working on third country resettlement. For the refugees, this can be a good option but not the best one. The UNHCR blames mainly Nepal for opposing resettlement in third countries. Nepal's position is that Bhutan needs to take back some of its people as per the bilateral agreement. The Bhutani refugee leadership agrees with this.

Obviously, the issue of refugees is closely linked to the protection of human rights and democracy in Bhutan. A royal dictatorship can perhaps heap injustices on a minority for some time. But ultimately the people will be victorious, and this has been proven by the recent events in the refugees' host country. Unfortunately, the lack of an organised pro-democracy movement has bolstered the harsh crackdowns by the Bhutani regime. Neighbouring democratic country India and the UN have been indirectly helping the anti-human rights and anti-democratic crackdowns by the Bhutani king against his own minority peoples.

It may appear to be in the short-term interest of some of the refugees, especially women and children, to be resettled in third countries. But to be forever torn apart from their country, community, culture and families can only be a last resort. It is important to restart the bilateral ministerial-level talks between Nepal and Bhutan to resolve the issue. Nepal must also remind New Delhi that its neutrality has helped the Bhutan king to continue with his activities against the refugees. Such repressive behaviour will be a challenge in efforts to fight terrorism in South Asia. It is also a test for King Jigme who seems to want to devolve his power and usher in democracy. He must remember that democracy isn't possible by violating the basic human rights of his minority population. That will just set back democracy.

Bhutan, Sikkim journos sign accord

BY UPENDRA POKHREL


GANTOK, SIKKIM (India), June 22 - With a view to exerting pressures for the repatriation of Bhutanese refugees, Bhutan Press Union (BPU) and Press Club of Sikkim signed an agreement, Thursday.
As per the four-point agreement, they would also raise issues for establishing democracy and press freedom in Bhutan. According to Hari Khanal, advisor of BPU, journalists in both the countries would carry news reports on the Bhutanese refugees on a regular basis.

"As we felt that cooperation of the people of north-east India for the solution of Bhutanese refugees' problems was necessary, we have reached this agreement to publicize the refugee-related issues in these areas," said he.

The Press Club of Sikkim also agreed to invite BPU reporters and send representatives for exchanging information. The tabloids in Sikkim would also cover news

and opinion on refugee issues. A team of reporters is also scheduled to visit the refugee camps.

Repatriate refugees

Bhutan holding India's hand has flatly refused to take back the verified refugees of Khudunabari camp. Thimpu still claims that the evicted refugees are not bonafide Bhutanese nationals despite being the victims of ethnic cleansing. This, obviously, is a slap on the face of the international community, especially the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) which should have taken strong stand on the repatriation of the verified refugees. It, instead, is advocating the third country settlement. In fact India and some European countries, which are advocating pluralism, democracy and human rights in third world countries, have backed the development projects in Bhutan, overlooking the refugee impasse. India says it is a bilateral matter though the refugees entered Nepal via India's chicken neck corridor. No matter how it deems the refugee impasse, India cannot ignore its responsibility citing it a bilateral matter. The international community knows it well that India has sided with Bhutan on the repatriation process.

The double stand adopted by India and some Western countries on the refugee right to return to their country illustrates that the so-called democratic countries are protecting the tinpot dictator. Such stand apparently encourages Bhutan to evict more people. Bhutan would have taken back all the refugees had Delhi asked the tinpot dictator to do so. Similarly, Switzerland, Denmark and other Nordic countries should have exerted pressure on the dictator to take back the refugees. But these countries continue to back the development projects in that country. The Bhutanese dictator has drafted the constitution without seeking any refugee consent. Has there been any dictator who has drafted a democratic constitution that met the people's aspirations? If Jigme Singye Wangchuck is a benevolent dictator, then why does he hesitate to take back his people?

The royal fossil Nagendra Bikram Shah handpicked by the royal regime as foreign minister committed another blunder. He deceived the one hundred thousand refugees instead of helping them repatriate to their homeland. The royal fossil agreed on the Bhutanese proposal --- the host country would initiate a process of assimilation. The 14 rounds of ministerial level bilateral talks produced no tangible result on the repartition process. What it did was that it stalled the bilateral talks and the verification team proved what the tinpot dictator was lying to the international community. Until the verification of Khudunabari camp, the dictator had claimed the people languishing at UNHCR-sponsored camps were not bona-fide refugees. The December 22 incident that led to pelting of stones at Bhutan's Joint Verification Team took place after the team used abusive language and strict conditions for the refugees. Such incident should not have delayed the refugee repatriation. Now India must understand this and help the refugees return to their homeland. The UNHCR should also respect what the refugees wish, and not what it wants.

Protracted refugee situation

By Dr Dhurba Rizal


No one chooses to be a refugee. Being a refugee means more than living in exile and depending on others. One of the most complex and difficult problems facing UNHCR today is that of protracted refugee situations. Over 64% of refugees in the world today are trapped in protracted refugee situations. Unwanted by their home country, grudgingly tolerated by their Nepalis hosts and of little interest to the international community, over 106000 Bhutanese refugees have been warehoused for more than a decade in the Jhapa and Morang district of Eastern Nepal.
Certain crimes lie beyond the scope of repentance. From torture to denationalization and ethnic cleansing, many of the rights violations experienced by refugees count amongst those grave injustices in the world for which it is impossible to truly make amends. More generally, the prolonged encampment of refugee populations has led to the violation of a number of rights contained in the 1951 UN Convention relating to the Status of Refugees. Faced with the restrictions, refugees become dependent on subsistence-level assistance, or less, and lead lives of poverty, frustration and unrealized potential.

They are frustrated and often dependent on others to find a solution to their plight. This is exactly the reason why they are now sitting on an indefinite hunger strike in front of UN House. This also indicates the level of frustration in the refugee community. Unresolved Bhutanese refugee situation represents a significant political phenomenon as well as a humanitarian problem. Protracted refugee situation often leads to a number of political and security concerns for host country, the country of origin, regional actors and the international community.

Through the simplifying lens of theory, it appears that if Bhutan created the refugees, then it should shoulder the challenge to take back its citizens. Not surprisingly, however, reality complicates the picture painted by theory. The negotiation between Bhutan and Nepal, the identification of the bonafide nationals, the terms and conditions for such identification and repatriation were all dictated by Bhutan. It has totally ignored the UNHCR and international community. It has been acquiesced by Nepal and tacitly supported by India. Bhutan government is steadfast in its resolve to continue the dead lock as it will give time to the regime to consolidate its hold on power by bringing artificially engineered demographic balance.

Time has come for us to ask: Why do these innocent refugees have to suffer? Is it a crime to become a refugee? Is this due to weak and partisan leadership among refugees, who have failed to aggregate and articulate their interests to deal with such complex human crisis? Is it due to disappointing response of India to the long-standing refugee affair? Is it due to declining interest of the USA, European Union and International Community? Are these people forgotten by International media like CNN and BBC, who claims to be the voice of the voiceless? Is a permanent and durable solution to the Bhutanese refugee crises evaporating? These questions can only raise and resonate the conflict of "Values and Interests" among the stakeholders of Bhutanese refugees crisis.

It is an unequal fight between the voiceless refugees and the government in power. The refugee policies, practices and solution are determined by the predominant power struggle for regional and global dominance. Political, socio-cultural and economic freedom, freedom from ideological constraints, freedom to define a new code of morality, which defines peace and security, democracy, human rights and sustainable development, can become truly universal values only if exercised alike without hidden interests and double standards. If we believe in these values, which we preach to others, then stakeholders of refugee crisis should intervene with utmost seriousness to support the cause of refugee and tame the regime. It is time to convey to Bhutan that the ultimate achievement of Gross National Happiness is intrinsically linked to the larger framework of inclusive democracy -- politically, economically and socio-culturally.

Bhutanese refugees continue to stagnate in over-crowded camps, which have neither the political nor the economic capacity to solve the problem. How can international community forget that Bhutan has created the largest per capita refugee population in the world? They are the one to tell the world that there are over a hundred thousand people, who have had their lives on hold for more than 15 years. How much longer would the world have them wait? If International community fails, they have to share in the blame for not having done enough, when there is the time for these voiceless refugees. It is only by redefining international solidarity in these terms, that we can hope to solve

the problem of refugees. Notwithstanding the growing significance of the problem, protracted Bhutanese refugee situations have not yet featured prominently on the international political agenda of major world power including the USA and India.

In the past, chronic and recurring refugee problems in Europe, Southeast Asia and Latin America have been resolved through comprehensive plans of action, involving not only humanitarian actors but also a range of political, security and development actors. Such an integrated approach is also needed to effectively resolve the protracted Bhutanese refugee crisis. The situation of the Bhutanese refugees has reached an impasse. The bilateral process has so far totally failed to respect the rights of the refugees or to achieve a durable solution for them. It is time for the international community and donor states of Nepal and Bhutan to convene an international conference, bringing all stakeholders together, including UN agencies and refugee representatives, to devise a comprehensive solution to this protracted refugee situation that meets international standards and gives due consideration to durable solutions. India, the US, European Union, Nepal and donor countries to Bhutan, should take active measures to ensure that refugee problem is resolved in full compliance with international human rights standards. If not resolved now, the refugee problem would fester and the role of the UNHCR and international community would be reduced to "simply administering human misery". The UNHCR has rightly said that "the consequence of having so many human beings in a static state include wasted lives, squandered resources and increased threats to security."

(The author is a visiting professor to the USA)

Bhutani refugees

Editorial in Samaya, 30 June



World Refugee Day came and went this week, and it was just a formality. For the 100,000 plus Bhutani refugees who have been living in camps for the past 14 years in Jhapa and Morang there is no hope of any positive developments this year.

The UNHCR which has been trying to get the refugees repatriated to Bhutan or assimilated in the host country Nepal is now also working on third country resettlement. For the refugees, this can be a good option but not the best one. The UNHCR blames mainly Nepal for opposing resettlement in third countries. Nepal's position is that Bhutan needs to take back some of its people as per the bilateral agreement. The Bhutani refugee leadership agrees with this.

Obviously, the issue of refugees is closely linked to the protection of human rights and democracy in Bhutan. A royal dictatorship can perhaps heap injustices on a minority for some time. But ultimately the people will be victorious, and this has been proven by the recent events in the refugees' host country. Unfortunately, the lack of an organised pro-democracy movement has bolstered the harsh crackdowns by the Bhutani regime. Neighbouring democratic country India and the UN have been indirectly helping the anti-human rights and anti-democratic crackdowns by the Bhutani king against his own minority peoples.

It may appear to be in the short-term interest of some of the refugees, especially women and children, to be resettled in third countries. But to be forever torn apart from their country, community, culture and families can only be a last resort. It is important to restart the bilateral ministerial-level talks between Nepal and Bhutan to resolve the issue. Nepal must also remind New Delhi that its neutrality has helped the Bhutan king to continue with his activities against the refugees. Such repressive behaviour will be a challenge in efforts to fight terrorism in South Asia. It is also a test for King Jigme who seems to want to devolve his power and usher in democracy. He must remember that democracy isn't possible by violating the basic human rights of his minority population. That will just set back democracy.

Last resort for refugees

By Swami Devi Bhakta Lamitarey


A simple man in lion cloth, who was once thrown out of the first class compartment in South African train because of his racial identity, compelled the mighty British Empire to retreat from the Indian sub-continent, and eventually leading to the collapse of colonial domination around the world. He was not armed with muscle power or sophisticated weapons. He had humility, passion for truth, and unshakable faith in peace and justice. He conducted morning and evening prayers to seek God's blessing; he practiced the philosophy of wining hearts and minds of the people through forgiveness. He fought for communal harmony: for him religion had no place if it created suffering to people; he sided with the downtrodden, calling them Harizan, people of God.
A man who had equal respect for all religions, who had built impeachable rapport with the Christians as well as the Buddhists, but he was a religious person without a religion. Eventually, the mighty British empire submitted at the humility of the Mahatma; India was given freedom on August 15, 1947.

Similarly, Martin Luther King experimented with the philosophy of non-violence. America had no heritage of Buddha or the karmic theory of rebirth, which gives solace to sufferings here on earth by giving the hope of a meritorious life hereafter.

Martin Luther King paraded thousands of satyagrahis in the streets of Washington DC, demanding equality for the black Americans at jobs, school enrollment and ownership of land and properties. He succeeded to change the minds of the Anglo Saxon, and secured the rights of the Black Americans.

The notorious apartheid regime of South Africa was defeated not with armed struggle but with the passive movement of the innocent native Africans. Nelson Mandela, embraced the philosophy of Mahatma Gandhi to give direction to the South African Congress, and that really won the hearts and minds of the international community.

Understandably, there were youth activists posturing violence, but it was never used in a mass scale. It is like Newton's law of motion: every action has equal and opposite reaction. If violence is used to defeat an enemy; sure enough, you can expect a similar response. And it is going to take a long time to bring peace and stability as we have seen in Darjeeling district. The principle of non-violence is not dead; it is being well applied by the noble laureate, Ang Sang Su Ki, of Myanmar. She knows very well that resorting to violence will entice the military junta to import more weapons and to strangle the voice for freedom and liberty with more draconian measures.

The human rights and democratic struggle in Bhutan did not start with proper planning and in-depth consideration. It was an emotional response to the racial policy of Bhutan which restricted the Lhotsampa population the use of Nepali language, practice of Nepali culture, and arbitrary disenfranchisement of citizenship rights of Bhutanese people, particularly those of Nepali ethnicity, during the census re-enumeration exercises of 1988. The peaceful protest movement of 1990 was preceded by the decapitation of Kailash Dahal and Balaram Giri, and that was perhaps done with the influence of tea garden politics as the earlier activists had taken shelter at Garganda Tea Estate.

Quite possibly, the brutal massacre of the satyagarhis by the royal government in 1954 in Sarbhang had left a deep scar in the minds of Bhutanese people about the practicality of peaceful resistance in a reactionary and feudal society like Bhutan. It required tremendous effort and soul-searching evaluation to convince the refugee youths to profess faith in peaceful struggle for establishment of human rights and democracy in Bhutan.

In the 1990s Bhutan People Party too had given a call for satyagraha movement. Later Bhutan National Democratic Party had announced launching of satyagraha inside the country if Bhutan failed to repatriate the refugees with honor and dignity.

Finally, the elderly citizens of Timai camps took the lead, that also at a time when there were no agitation activities in the Bhutanese movement. They have decided to organize peaceful activities under the banner of satyagraha movement. After organizing a year-long sitting dharna at Timai camps, the elderly citizens have managed to receive support of Bhutan National Democratic Party, Bhutanese Refugee Representative Repatriation Committee, and Druk National Congress (kuenley) to continue with their peaceful struggle.

On 17 December 2005, the elderly citizens organized mass demonstration at Mechi Bridge (Indo-Nepal border), where a delegation of Indo-Bhutan Friendship Society, under the leadership of former Union Minister Shri Satya Prakash Malvia, addressed the gathering of 3000 strong refugees where it was emphasized that the only way for the refugees to reach Bhutan was to follow the path shown by Mahatma Gandhi. Other speakers were from Gandhi Peace Foundation, prominent individuals and social workers from India.

It might sound ridiculous to reactionary individuals to believe in peaceful struggle when the barrel of the guns are setting the tone of the political struggle in Nepal, the host country for the refuges during the last 15 years. The youths are in the forefront to question the relevance of Mahatma's philosophy for ushering changes in Bhutan.

The peaceful wait of fifteen years has not delivered anything, and the reactionary forces in Thimphu have not relaxed a bit to show cultural tolerance towards the Lhotsampa community. Nevertheless, it would be unfair to bundle everyone in the same basket. Bhutan is avowedly a Buddhist country and there are people who have the concept of moral rights and wrongs. Except for some cabinet members, the vast majority of the Bhutanese people are worried about the state of present impasse in finding an amicable resolution of the refugee problem.

Therefore, it is time for everybody to rally around satyagraha Movement, giving unconditional support to the effort made by the elderly people of Timai camps. There is a need to move out from the camp politics: do adequate lobbying in Bhutan, India and abroad.