Children exercise franchise in camps

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Children of all camps have voted on Monday for electing their representatives for the Bhutanese Refugee Children Forum.

However, no election was held in Timai camp that is being consolidated into three Beldangi camps, informed Camp Secretary Yubaraj Rai.

The Forum said that Karna Bahadur Rai from Sanischare, Bhim Bahadur Mongar from three Beldangi camps, and Diwas Bhandari from Khudunabari camp were elected as children coordinators for 2012.

Reported by Khem Dahal and Hari Kumar Dahal for BNS from Beldangi

BPP demands dignified repatriation

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The Bhutan Peoples’ Party (BPP) has demanded dignified repatriation of exiled Bhutanese to their homeland, saying the third country resettlement cannot be considered a permanent solution of the long-standing refugee crisis.

Balaram Poudyal

In an appeal sent to Nepalese Foreign Minister Narayan Kaji Shrestha on Monday, who earlier said the Government of Nepal was preparing to sit for a decisive talk with its Bhutanese counterpart, BPP even asked to bring India in the negotiation table to explore a permanent solution of the imbroglio.

“We have expected important support and solidarity from the Nepali government towards our issue,” said Party President Balaram Poudyal in his appeal letter.

The party also demanded formation of a permanent taskforce to handle the refugee issue in Nepal, and asked the government and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) to settle pending cases of asylum seekers at the earliest possible.

Meanwhile, Poudyal also suggested the government to grant political asylum to political and human rights activists in Nepal unless doors for repatriation open.

बिपिपिले परराष्टमन्त्री नारायण काजीमसमक्ष चडायो अपिलपत्र

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संघीय लोकतान्त्रिक गणतन्त्र नेपालका उप-प्रधान तथा परराष्टमन्त्री नारायण काजी श्रेष्ठसमक्ष भुटान पिपल्स पार्टीले  एक ज्ञापनपत्र बुझाएको छ । आज उक्त पार्टीका अध्यक्ष बलराम पौडेलद्वारा सिंह दरवारस्थित परराष्ट मन्त्रालयमा वहाँसित भेटवार्ता गरी चार बुँदे मागसहितको अपिल चठाएका हुन् ।

विज्ञापिप्तमा उन्लेख गरिएको छ कि नेपालका प्रधानमन्त्री र भुटानका प्रधानमन्त्रीबिच गत महिना माल्दिभ्समा सम्मन्न दक्षिण एसियाली सहयोग संगठन-सार्क)को सत्रौं शिखर सम्मेलनमा भएको अनौपचारिक वार्तापछि नेपाल सरकारले द्विपक्षीय वार्ताकोलागि भुटानी सरकारलाई पत्र चठाएपछि शरणार्थीहरुमा स्वदेश फिर्ने खुसी छाएको छ । त्यसै खुसीमा पैडेलले द्विपक्षीय वार्ताले मात्र शरणार्थीहरुको स्वदेश फिर्ती अभियान सफल नहुने किन्तु त्यसमा छिमेकी भारतको पनि सहभागिता हुनुपर्नेमा पौडेलले जिकिर गरेका छन् । “भूटानको परराष्ट्र नीति, सुरक्षा र विकासमा समेत महत्वपूर्ण भूमिका खेल्दैआएको र शरणार्थी समस्याबारे सुरूदेखि नै मौन रहने गरेको  छिमेकी मुलुक भारतको सहभागिता बिना यस मुद्दाले निकासा नपाउने विगतका घटनाक्रमले पनि स्पष्ट निर्देशित गरिसकेको छ “, अपिलमा भनिएको छ | अपिल यहाँ डाउनलोड गर्नुहोस्

उक्त ज्ञापन पत्रमा भूटानी शरणार्थी समस्याको दीर्घकालीन समाधानकालागि एउटा स्थायी कार्यदलको गठन, दर्ता छुटेका, परिचयपत्र नपाएका, राहत वञ्चित र मिश्रित विवाह गरेका शरणार्थीहरूको यथाशीघ्र छानबीन गरी अन्य शरणार्थीसरह मान्यता दिन आग्रह, भूटानी शरणार्थी समस्या यथाशीघ समाधानका लागि भारतसहित बहुपक्षीय वार्ता आरम्भ गर्न आग्रह र भूटानको राजनीतिक समस्या समाधान नभएसम्म या शरणार्थी स्वदेश फिर्तीको वातावरण नबन्दासम्म शरणार्थी भूटानी राजनीतिकर्मी, दलका नेता र मानवअधिकारकर्मीलाई राजनीतिक शरणको व्यवस्था गर्न आग्रह गरिएको जस्ता मूख्य विषयहरु छन् ।

Southern Bhutanese tops India’s sixth university

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 Barun Chhetri, 24, from Sibsoo, Samtse of the Southern Bhutan has been ranked the first among all students of his batch in the Anna University of India.

Barun Chhetri (Picture : Kuensel)

This university is ranked the sixth among Indian universities, and has over 200 international students from various countries including Bhutan.

A student of the Hindustan College of Engineering under the university has scored 75 percent as aggregate this year, and will be awarded with a gold medal in coming April, reported the Kuensel Sunday.

Chhetri told media that he has regarded the success he achieved as lifetime achievement in his academic journey.

He is currently working at the Yalama Arts and Consultancy, a private architecture firm in Thimphu, according to the report.

Three-day Buddhist fasting ends in Beldangi-I

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A three-day fasting based on the Buddhist philosophy that was underway since December 9 ended today amidst a closing ceremony.

Altogether 87 men and women from camps and local host community fasted without water for 36 hours and without food for 48 hours, organizers informed.

The organizers also informed that the fasting was organized for peace in the world and welfare of all living beings across the globe.

Representatives from various camp-based organizations, camp management committee, religious groups and host community, among others were present during the closing ceremony, Sunday.

Contributed jointly by Bishnu Maya Tamang and Sushma Mongar for BNS from Beldangi-I

Elderly citizens ask to open doors for repatriation

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Senior Citizens Group  and the Bhutanese Refugee Representative Repatriation Committee (BRRRC) asked the Government of Nepal and United Nations Organizations to press for opening doors for dignified repatriation.

Senior citizens of the community pose for a group photo

Observing the 63th World Democracy Day on Saturday, both the groups said the third country resettlement is not a permanent solution of the refugee imbroglio, and the concerned authority should exercise enough measures to repatriate exiled Bhutanese at the earliest.

“We are not against the resettlement. However, this must go on the choice of individual refugee,” told Dr Bhampa Rai, Chairperson of the BRRRC.

According to Dr Rai, the international community and resettlement countries have major role in convincing Bhutan to accept exiled Bhutanese back home with dignity and honour.

He also informed the community that discussion to begin Satyagraha campaign from December 17 was underway.

Meanwhile, former Caption of the Royal Bhutan Army, N.B.Giri expressed that Bhutanese in every corner of the world would support any initiative towards repatriation.

Sailendra Singh Arora of the Bhutan Solidarity Group, India

Speaking in the same program, Indian national Salindra Singh Arora of the Bhutan Solidarity Group, assured support of his group for Satyagraha campaign, saying that was the only option to press the Government of Bhutan to take citizens back to their homeland.

“We have been with this issue since 16 years. The Bhutan Support Group will leave no stone unturned to ask our government to convince Bhutanese authority,” said Arora.

In a letter addressed to Nepalese Prime Minister Dr Baburam Bhattarai, the senior citizens said the exiled Bhutanese reaffirm that the troubled Bhutanese people in Bhutan and the exiled community are integral citizens of Bhutanese where peace and normalcy means to open the door of repatriation and establishment of true democracy and human rights in Bhutan.

BAF-Europe highlights HR, exiled issue

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The Bhutanese Advocacy Forum  (BAF – Europe) raised the issue of exiled Bhutanese and human rights situations of the country in the Dutch Parliament on 7 December and at the European Parliament on 8 December.

Hague-based Global Human Rights Defense (GHRD) together with Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (ALDE) organized the program.

The Forum appraised on Bhutanese issues with Haary van Bommel, Head of the Human Rights Committee of the Dutch Parliament, on December 7, stated a press release issued on Friday.

The Bhutanese delegates in the European Parliament (Picture : BAF-Europe)

“The delegation strongly raised the issues of human rights violations and the lack of inclusive and vibrant democracy in Bhutan. It also complained that the developmental activities in Bhutan are mostly concentrated in the east and west,” said the statement.

The Forum further said that it also informed that the southern Bhutanese are denied of equal opportunity to education and employment, saying that even the southern Bhutanese students who secured the excellent marks in their final school examinations have been deprived of getting enrolled in the government colleges.

The Bhutanese delegation communicated that the Lhotsampas are not entitled for the services in departments like national airlines, post, the ministries of home and foreign affairs, police and army

The delegation advised Bommel to strengthen Bhutan-Dutch relations, but ensuring that Bhutan treats the entire citizens equally without any discrimination based on race, religion, region, conscience and ethnicity.

Meanwhile, the delegation also asked the Dutch Parliament to press Bhutan to release all political prisoners unconditionally.

“Decision to change the names of villages and towns in southern Bhutan should be reviewed which otherwise is also a form of ethnic cleansing,” added the statement.

The Bhutanese delegates in European Parliament

In both the occasions, the delegates appealed the EU to work towards bringing refugee leaders and Bhutan government together at one table for the permanent solution of the Bhutanese refugee and other related issues.

The delegation also requested European Union to send an independent monitoring team to control the effective implementation of those recommendations accepted by Bhutan during the 6th Universal Periodic Reviews in March 2010, and even similar team should also be formed in Damak, Nepal to monitor the screening of the Bhutanese refugees’ resettlement process.

It further added that monitoring the screening was a must to avoid unnecessary wastage of refugees’ time and massive corruption and harassment in the whole process.

Similarly, in another conference themed ‘Rights of Minorities in South Asia’ held in the European Parliament, the six-member Bhutanese delegation led by Founding Member and Coordinator for Germany Tej Man Rayaka, highlighted similar issues and concerns, added the statement.

Parliament prepares to amend ‘tobacco law’

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Following mounting pressure from various sectors including some Members of Parliament (MPs), the Parliament is preparing to amend the “tobacco law” as urgent bills in January.

Sonam Tshering after he was convicted by Thimphu Court/Globalvoicesonline.

Based on practices, all urgent bills have to be amended and adopted in the same session. The winter session of the Parliament is commencing from January 4.

The act that was enforced from January this year has already convicted 10 of smuggling and jailed.

The government and Parliament received much criticism when a local court slapped 3 years of jail term to a monk student, who was caught with chewing tobacco worth Nu 120.

Citizens have started building rays of hope that those insides the bars would receive amnesty and be released following the completing of the Winter Session of the Parliament.

Dead or still alive?

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Dal Bahadur Khadka, who is a volunteer at the camp management committee of Beldangi-II camp, has received a letter from Chemgang Central Jail, where dozens of political prisoners have been spending their pathetic lives since late 80s and early 90s.

Katwal in his in hut in Beldangi-II camp prior to his arrest

The letter has asked Khadka and the exiled community to raise concern over the deteriorating health of 61-year-old N.L. Katwal, a senior leader of the Bhutan Gorkha National Liberation Front.

According to the letter dated November 12, Katwal was reportedly undergoing fast-unto-death since October 17. The family source claimed he has been demanding unconditional release of all political prisoners.

“He has been fasting-to-death since 27 days. We are worried about his deteriorating health. He has lost almost 10 kilogram of the body weight,” reads the prison letter, which Khadka received this week through one of the ICRC visitors.

The letter also claims that the government was silent towards the protest inside the jail.

Interestingly, the UN agencies in the capital city and media operating within the country have all remained mum over this issue.

“We ask you to highlight his hunger strike through various national and international media to put pressure on the government. Otherwise, his situation is really critical,” adds the letter.

Tek Bahadur Katwal (left) with Dal Bahadur Khadka, who together visited the Central Jail in September this year

Meanwhile, Tek Bahadur Katwal said he has already alerted the ICRC office in Kathmandu about the ongoing hunger strike of his father inside the prison.

“We have been told that ICRC office in New Delhi will monitor his situation inside the prison. However, we are very much worried since no one knows if our dad has ended the hunger strike or not,” expresses he.

His father was preparing for fasting-to-death when he last visited the Central Jail in Thimphu earlier this September, he claimed.

“This is the second time that my father has chosen fast-unto-death demanding unconditional release of all political prisoners from various jails of the country.”

In 2009, activist Katwal fasted-to-death for a week before a team of doctors forcefully administered glucose to him, bringing the hunger strike to an end.

Katwal, who was arrested in 2000 from Phuntsholing while leading a peaceful rally, has been serving a jail term of 13 and a half years after the country’s highest kangaroo court found him guilty of ‘demonstrating against the government and disturbing peace and harmony in the country’.

Unfortunately, the Bhutan Gorkha National Liberation Front that was fighting for dignified repatriation of exiled Bhutanese and unconditional release of political prisoners from various jails, has become a defunct party and is not in a position to raise this issue at present, as most of the central leaders have retired from the exiled politics or already accepted the third country resettlement.

“The party will not do any thing to save the life of my father. Various human rights groups, ICRC and media should put pressure on Bhutan to fulfill demands of my father,” he clarifies.

According to him, the family has been requesting the ICRC to schedule a prison visit immediately to know the status of his father.

“So far we haven’t received a positive response in this regard. However, we regard that it is our right to know if our father is dead or still alive.”

Blood donation camp organised to mark Int’l Volunteer Day in Khudunabari

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The Youth Friendly Center (YFC) of Khudunabari camp organised blood donation camp on December 5 to mark the International Volunteer Day 2011.

The Nepal Red Cross Society of Damak collected altogether 28 pints of blood during the camp, YFC Assistant Program Coordinator Monarath Pokhrel informed.

Meanwhile, Pasang Tamng and Meg Nath Chhetri became winners of the Inter-Sector Dual Acting Dance Competition held on the same day.

Reported by Deo Kumar Tamang from Khudunabari for BNS