भूटानमा दुताबास खोल्ने जापानको तयारी

जापानले भूटानमा आफ्नो राजदुताबास खोल्ने भएको छ । भूटानका राजाले गत बर्ष गरेको आग्रहका आधारमा २०१४ सम्ममा जापानले भूटानमा दुताबास खोल्ने अधिकारीहरुले जानकारी दिएका छन ।

जापानी झण्डा

गत नोवेम्बरमा राजा जिङ्मे खेसर नम्गेल वाङ्चुक र रानी जेट्सन पेमाको जापान भ्रमणका अवसरमा यस्तो प्रस्ताब राखेका थिए । परराष्ट्र मन्त्रालयले पनि आवश्यकता रहेको भन्दै दुताबास खोल्ने निर्णय गरेको अधिकारीहरुले बताएका छन ।

शान्ति र सुरक्षित रहने हेतुले सदैब तथस्ट रहदै आएको भुटानले अहिले सम्म संयुक्त राष्ट्रसंघ सुरक्षा निकायका रष्ट्रसँग कुटनितिक सम्बन्ध राखेको छैन । हालको स्थितीमा भूटानमा केवल ईन्डिया, बङ्गलादेश र कुवेतका दुताबास मात्रै रहेका छन ।

भूटानका लागी जापानसँग सम्बन्धित काम ईन्डियामा रहेको जापानी दुताबासले गर्दै आएको छ ।

साथै, जानकारीमा दुताबास २०१४ देखि सन्चालनमा आउने पनि जनाएका छन । करीब ६००,००० जनसन्ख्या रहेको भूटानले जापानमा पनि आफ्नो दुताबास राख्न खोजेको समेत जनकारी आएको छ ।

अनुवाद सौजन्य ः गोविन्द रिजाल

Country’s first pvt airline suspends domestic flights

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For failing to attract enough passengers, the Bhutan Airlines has finally decided to chip its domestic wings.

The Bhutan Airlines

The Airlines that currently owns 8-seater turboprop, Pilatus PC-12, has so far flown just 336 passengers since it came into operation in December last year.

However, the final decision regarding the suspension is expected to be approved by the aviation authority sometime next week. The turboprop has been parked inside a hangar at the Paro Airport.

Meanwhile, the Airlines is learnt to be been preparing to sell the aircraft to raise expected funds of US$ 3 million for leasing an airbus A320 as it plans to operate international flights. If everything goes as per Airlines plan, Bhutan will have two airlines for international operations by October or November this year.

For finalizing the leasing package, the Tashi Group has been approached to lend another 3 million, reports quoted Bhutan Airlines CEO David Young as confirming.

Japan eying for its embassy in Bhutan

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Japan has decided to open an embassy in Bhutan, possibly in 2014, following a request last year from the Himalayan country’s king, diplomats said.

The Japanese flag

The request was made when King Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck and Queen Jetsun Pema visited Japan in November, just a month after they were wed, to mark the 25th anniversary of diplomatic ties between the two countries, online edition of The Japan Times (TJT) reports, Sunday.

The Foreign Ministry has determined that it is necessary to establish an embassy in Bhutan to help the country, which is strategically situated between India and China, promote its democratization process through economic cooperation, according to the report.

“Many officials at the ministry also believe that setting up an embassy in the capital, Thimphu, would be effective in countering China’s influence in the region. The ministry wants to have the new embassy up and running by 2014, although budgetary constraints could make this difficult.”

At present, only India, Bangladesh and Kuwait have embassies in the country, and the Japanese Embassy in India is currently accredited to Bhutan, according to the Foreign Ministry.

It’s time for all to walk

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Finally, the Prime Minister Jigmi Y Thinley’s government has decided to ban public and private motors on every Tuesday to celebrate the day as Pedestrians’ Day across the country.

Schoolgirls walking home from school in the town of Paro (Picture Courtesy: Getty Images)

The Prime Minister issued an executive order on June 1 to observe the Pedestrians’ Day from June 5 onwards.

Except service vehicles like ambulance, fire brigades, and vehicles of security forces will be allowed on Tuesdays, according to the order.

Furthermore, public buses and taxis will be plying once a month based on odd and even number plates. Bicycles are always allowed, the order mentioned.

The Ministry of Agriculture had proposed this plan some four years ago with an aim of promoting “no vehicle day” at least once a week.

A number of organizations have already assured the Prime Minister of their supports in implementing the move.

Experts throw mixed reactions on RTI act

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Various experts, Bhutanese and foreigners, have expressed mixed reactions on whether Bhutan is ready to adopt the right to information (RTI) act.

They presented such mixed reactions during a two-day discussion seminar on RTI that concluded on Thursday in the country.

RTI proposed draft sponsor Sangay Khandu

 Among participants of the seminar, Indian experts stated that RTI act was inappropriate for Bhutan saying the discussions have just begun.

According to them a central information commission is a must for endorsing RTI act.  Chairperson of the National Commission on Minorities in India, Wajahat Habidullah, expressed such an opinion, the Kuensel reported on Friday.

Most of the participants felt the need of RTI act for good governance, transparency and accountability, but they also said enough homework is a must.

However, officials at the Ministry of Information and Communication said they were exercising seriously to “refine and update the proposed RTI draft”.

They also opined that passing the act would be an easy step, however, the implementing part might be equally challenging.

Sponsored by parliamentarian Sangay Khandu as a private bill, the proposed RTI bill was rejected by the House earlier last month as several lawmakers stood against it saying it was inappropriate on various grounds.

UNHCR warns of worsening global displacement

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UN High Commissioner for Refugees António Guterres warned on Thursday that factors causing mass population flight are growing and over the coming decade more people on the move will become refugees or displaced within their own country.

UN High Commissioner for Refugees António Guterres (Picture courtesy : UNHCR)

In comments marking the launch in New York of “The State of the World’s Refugees: In Search of Solidarity,” Guterres said displacement from conflict was becoming compounded by a combination of causes, including climate change, population growth, urbanization, food insecurity, water scarcity and resource competition.

All these factors are interacting with each other, increasing instability and conflict and forcing people to move. In a world that is becoming smaller and smaller, finding solutions, he said, would need determined international political will.

“The world is creating displacement faster than it is producing solutions,” said Guterres. “And this means one thing only: more people trapped in exile over many years, unable to return home, to settle locally, or to move elsewhere. Global displacement is an inherently international problem and, as such, needs international solutions – and by this I mainly mean political solutions.”

The new publication details these and other changes to the environment for the displaced since 2006, when the previous edition of the book was published. It presents a decidedly gloomier outlook: larger and more complex displacement challenges, increased threats to the safety of humanitarian workers, and states needing to strengthen their cooperation.

Notable among these changes is the emergence of internal displacement as a dominant challenge. Today, most of the world’s 43 million people forced to flee their homes are not refugees but people who are displaced within their own countries, commonly referred to as internally displaced people, or IDPs. Globally, some 26 million people fall into this category, compared to around 15-16 million refugees and a further 1 million asylum-seekers.

For humanitarian workers, an ensuing implication is that helping the displaced is becoming more costly and dangerous. In countries such as Somalia, Afghanistan, Yemen or Iraq, getting help to internally displaced populations means working in environments where access is difficult and conflict or criminality can present deadly risk.

“The State of the World’s Refugees” looks at these problems and the state of cooperation among countries. “The space for humanitarian intervention is shrinking exactly when the need for humanitarian help is increasing. Pressures on the international protection system are clearly growing. In some industrialized countries in particular we see fortress mentalities that serve only to shift responsibility and compassion elsewhere. In a world where societies are becoming multi-cultural and multi-ethnic, it is essential to promote the values of tolerance and to fight the manifestation of xenophobia,” said Guterres.

Several chapters in the book look at emerging challenges, including the growing numbers of urban refugees as well as displacement from climate change and natural disasters. The book notes that more people are displaced annually by natural disasters than by conflict. And it carries a warning about gaps in international protection when it comes to people who flee across borders to escape climate change impacts or natural disasters. They are not recognized as refugees under international law.

The book describes how UNHCR and its partners have developed innovative practices in response to evolving displacement challenges. However, it also elaborates the struggle UNHCR often faces in promoting state compliance with customary international law as it relates to the forcibly displaced, or the compliance of signatory states to their obligations under the 1951 UN Refugee Convention and its 1967 Protocol. It looks, too, at the problems of the world’s estimated 12 million stateless people – without citizenship of any country, they are often trapped in legal and human rights limbo.

Eighty per cent of today’s refugees live in the developing world. Greater international solidarity is needed to address this challenge, the book concludes. This encompasses providing more resettlement opportunities for refugees in the industrialized world, focusing development cooperation projects to foster sustainable voluntary return or local integration, and supporting host communities. A new deal in burden and responsibility sharing is needed in the whole cycle of refugee protection from prevention of conflict to solutions.

Refugee student a leader for other English learners

He wasn’t at Canyon Ridge High School for long, but Bhutanese refugee Lok Darjee feels a sense of attachment to his school.

Lok Darjee, a refugee from Nepal, poses for a photo at Canyon Ridge High School on Tuesday May 29, 2012 in Twin Falls. Darjee is planning on attending the College of Southern Idaho next year (Picture courtesy : Julie Wootton)

As graduation day approaches, Darjee — who arrived in Twin Falls February 2011 from a refugee camp in Nepal — said he’s sad about leaving high school.

“I always feel school is home, you know,” he said.

Canyon Ridge High vice principal Mike Gemar describes Darjee is a good student with “exceptional work ethic” who shows a high level of respect for his teachers.

Darjee, he said, also provides leadership for other students in the English Language Learners program.

“He won’t tell you that, but I will,” Gemar said.

Darjee said his family members and teachers helped him get to graduation day.

“My teachers are like my parents,” he said. “They take care of me in every sense.”

Darjee will join 217 of his classmates during Canyon Ridge High’s graduation ceremony Friday at the College of Southern Idaho gymnasium.

He wants to continue his education at CSI, but isn’t sure what to study.

Darjee said he can’t leave Twin Falls because he helps take care of his family members. That includes translating and completing paperwork. Throughout his time in high school, he balanced those family responsibilities with schoolwork and a job.

The downside — it didn’t leave much time to be a teenager and spend time with friends he made at school, he said.

As a Canyon Ridge student, Darjee said one of the largest obstacles is the language barrier. Although he learned some British English growing up, he said some people at school can’t understand what he’s saying.

The school experience in Twin Falls is “totally different” than what he experienced before, he said, adding that he sees it as a higher quality education.

One of his favorite memories of his time at Canyon Ridge was International Week this spring.

Students had a chance to share food, music and customs from their home country. Darjee was the emcee for a school-wide assembly with musical performances.

He also enjoys videography and while he was in Nepal, he worked on a documentary about life in refugee camps. Darjee said he produced a video last week about school bullying.

High school students, Darjee said, face a variety of obstacles. But he said he wants to let other teenagers know there are opportunities available to them.

“High school is one of the opportunities for myself to know who am I,” he said.

Courtesy : Time-News

Edema among students in Luentshe

Eight students of Luentshe Higher Secondary School had to be admitted to the hospital after they were found to be suffering from edema, a condition of swollen lower limbs resulted due to nutritional deficiencies.

When health officials visited the school on May 28, 46 students including 10 girls were found to have edema in the hostel housing 278 students as boarders. The students were not aware of the condition as nutritional deficiency disease although the ones suffering study in higher grades. One of the students, a grade 12 science student, who went for the medical checkup, said he could not find himself as ill, because it was painless.

The district medical officer, Dr. Sonam Jamtsho assured the students not to panic since the condition is likely to be caused by nutritional deficiency and it will improve over the time. The limbs are swollen because of the accumulation of fluid below the skin. He said, ‘The students are administered vitamin B and C so the condition is improving.’

Similar incidences of swollen limbs have been found among the students of Orong HSS and Martshala middle secondary school in Samdrupjongkhar district. In Marstshala some 24 students were found with edema last month.

School students in Bhutan have been clearly lacking essential nutrients in their diet, particularly those living in remote areas and depending on the hostel menu. In many rural parts, students as young as seven years walk more than one hour with their heavy backpacks to and fro from the school. And, poverty contributes to their low nutrition.

Bhutan garners support for UNSC non-permanent candidacy

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Prime Minister Jigmi Y Thinley has told mediapersons that his government was trying to garner supports from the neighboring countries for filing Bhutan’s candidacy as a non-permanent member of the United Nations Security Council (UNSC).

“Having gained so much from UN in the last 40 years, we feel it is time for us to move further. Bhutan is now the candidate for the post of non-permanent member of the UN Security Council for the 2013-2015 period,” the PM told reporters, Tuesday.

The Prime Minister expressed such an opinion while speaking to ambassadors and high commissioners, and urged them to convince their countries for supporting Bhutan’s move for the same.

“I would imagine that Bhutan as a country sitting between India and China, it must take advantage of the opportunities the rapidly prospering countries will offer,” he added, according to the online edition of Bermana.

The result of Bhutan’s candidacy in the UNSC is expected to be released later this year in October.

Bhutan has been a permanent member of the United Nations Organizations since 1971.

Bhutan deports three tourists to Nepal

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Probably for the first time, Bhutanese immigration officials deported two Chinese and one Swiss nations to Nepal for arriving in Bhutan with forged visa documents.

File photo : Druk Aircraft in a parking lot at Tribhuwan International Airport (TIA) in Kathmandu (Picture : Vidhyapati Mishra)

Reports say that the trio, who had flown to the Paro Airport from Tribhuwan International Airport (TIA) of Nepal on May 23, were deported on the following day.

The immigration officials seized their fake visas when they didn’t find their details in the online visa system, and finally deported back to TIA. However, details of the tourists have not been revealed yet.

Meanwhile, the Tourism Council of Bhutan suspended the license of tour operator Bhutan Village that received the tourists. The Department of Immigration has imposed a fine of Nu 30,000 for illegally bringing in those tourists.

However, the Bhutan Village is learnt to have blamed its Nepali business partner, Himalayan Rock Treks and Expedition, for inviting such a fate, and even accusing it of forging tourist visa documents in Nepal.

Including the suspended Bhutan Village, 307 registered tour operators have been receiving foreign tourists in Bhutan as the government targets to get 10,000 tourists’ arrival for 2012.