Bhutan News Service |
- Dasain celebration kicks off in Bhutan
- Husband hacks his wife to death
- Government of Bhutan created refugees
| Dasain celebration kicks off in Bhutan Posted: 13 Oct 2010 08:30 AM PDT Bhutanese monarch has given a little ease to its Hindu community by allowing them to celebrate their greatest festival Dasain 2067 BS at the Durga Mandir in Thimphu. With the theme of "Peace and Happiness through Spiritual Growth and Development" a team of nine Pundits headed by Pundit PL Nirola started Durga Puja on October 8 and that will end on October 17 on the day of Vijaya Dasami. Talking to Choeday Lhentshog (Religious Commision) Pundit Nirola said that Durga puja symbolizes the victory of good over evil. During the nine-day puja, the Devi Puran, Devi Saptasati, Ramayan, Vedas and other sacred religious texts will be recited, and prayers offered to seek blessings for good health and long life of the monarchs and the people of Bhutan. Besides those living in the capital city, the Hindu communities around the country have also been reported to have already started their Dasain celebration. The fourth king of Bhutan, Jigme Singye Wangchhuk declared Vijaya Dasami a national holiday in 1980. |
| Husband hacks his wife to death Posted: 12 Oct 2010 10:55 PM PDT An exiled Bhutanese Tuesday night hacked his spouse to death following a family dispute between the couple. The camp-based Armed Police Force (APF) informed Bhutan News Service that Prem Bahadur Mongar registered at sector D-4 hut number 344, killed his wife, Ran Maya Mongar during a serious quarrel between them. Police informed, Mongar used sharp weapons to kill his wife. APF arrested the killer while the dead body is taken to Bhadrapur of Jhapa district for postmortem, informed Camp Secretary TB Gurung. Monger's neighbours suspected that Ran Maya was fully drunk as her husband returned from Damak. Reported by Lok Mahara for BNS from Beldangi-I |
| Government of Bhutan created refugees Posted: 12 Oct 2010 05:35 PM PDT On one of the fine days of early 1991, Nepalese people at Kakarvitta near Indo-Nepal border witnessed about 450 people with worn out faces and woozy looks entering Nepal looking for temporary shelter who in response provided the best of services and support that they could render at their level. They were all Bhutanese seeking asylum after being evicted of their ancestral land. Unable to get asylum in India, the first country they entered after leaving Bhutan, these people had no options but to seek shelter in Nepal. Moreover, the Indian border security forces instigated them enter Nepal. Eviction was the result of these people's demand for justice and institutionalization of Human Rights as enshrined in Universal Declaration of Human Rights to which Bhutan is signatory, to safeguard themselves from discriminatory and suppressive policies being imposed on them that obliterate their faith, culture and way of life. Instead of hearing to their appeal, the Royal government chose to militarize the region launching brutal method of crackdown, following intimidation, arbitrary arrest, torture and killing in makeshift detention cells. Schools were converted into interrogation centers, while women were raped, houses were zeroed to ashes and valuable documents confiscated alongside the militarization of villages and towns. In such dreaded state of affairs, those affected Bhutanese people had to flee the country for their lives. Their relatives and others, who decided to remain behind too were coerced into signing voluntary migration forms at the gun point and finally evicted from their homeland. Immediate settlement of Bhutanese refugees It is obvious that all the Bhutanese people, evicted in the first phase and later those who followed the suit, passed first through the Indian check posts and entered Nepal check post before joining their country mates at Kankai camps. Those refugees began to extend their arms for donations in kind, cash and medicines for their survival before the international agencies arrived at their rescue. And, that ultimately turned into what the world witnesses today. Senior Bhutanese officers joined Bhutanese refugees Asylum in Nepal Administration of the camp Oppression on Sharchhokp community For the outside world, it looked more like an ethnic cleansing given the fact that the majority of the affected were of single ethnicity at that point of time. However, in view of the prevailing bond of peaceful coexistence of the diversity for centuries, the general public in other parts of the country gradually began to raise their voice for justice and their civil rights which was in support to the people's voice in the south. The people of the south had no other alternatives but to leave the country because the eviction took place both at gun and pen point using different methods of more wrathful and less charming coercions through the district authorities backed by military forces. Since the Govt. of Bhutan didn't get much resistance at the time of evicting southern Bhutanese en-mass, the regime confidently dared to turn its attention on the other section of Bhutanese multi-ethnicity, the Sharchhokps. It interfered in the practice of Nyngmapa sect of Buddhism, which was indoctrinated into the community since 7th century AD. The regime's rampant indulgence into their affairs badly hit the sentiments of the Sharchhokp monks and their community and gradually realized that the southern up-rise of the people were just and genuine. So, in support to the 1990's appeal by the south Bhutan, the Sharchhokp community organized a mass peaceful procession that demanded equality to all faiths and culture. However, even before the peaceful procession could take up to the roads, a Buddhist monk was picked up by the district chief and shot him dead point blank at a high pass. Many other innocent people were arrested, while some of them continue to languish in the prisons. Some others had to flee the country for their lives following armed military crackdown in the Sharchhokp dominated regions, where peaceful processions successfully made it over to the respective district and local administrative centers. They ultimately joined their countrymen in refugee camps in eastern Nepal. When the government realized the growing anger in the Sharchhokp community, the regime as a means to pacify the situation quickly promoted junior Sharchhokp officers to the higher ranks in 1998, lifting them as high as cabinet ministers. However, that did not benefit the community as a whole, but strengthened the palace as its mouth piece in the campaign and advocacy against people who demanded democracy, justice and human rights. Political Parties and Social Organizations In 1998, to avoid confusion amongst the Bhutanese refugees and to support various agencies providing assistance to the refugees, including the government of Nepal, the refugee community formed a committee, "by the Bhutanese refugees and for the Bhutanese refugees" named "Bhutanese Refugee Representative Repatriation Committee" (BRRRC) by keeping all political parties and social organizations intact to allow them function according their respective constitutional provisions. The BRRRC took the initiatives to documenting information of all the Bhutanese refugees with due suggestions and assistance from the CARITAS and LWF. It aimed at serving the Bhutanese refugees as their caretaking guardian and serve them in collaboration and coordination with all concerned agencies so that rights of those ignorant refugees are secured and impartial justice is given to all. However, for various obvious reasons, the BRRRC's position had been undermined and ignored by the concerned agencies making the repatriation program of BRRC more marginalized. More influx of refugees UNHCR and INGOs Move for Repatriation Bilateral Talks Joint Verification Present stand of Nepal Role of India At this juncture, it is not out of place to remind the world community that the friendly relationship that Bhutan and India cherish both at the central and people's level dates back to as old as Lord Buddha's era. People both in exile and inside the country have no doubt about the sacrosanct values of friendship that have been built with bricks of love, friendship and understanding both culturally and through exchange of trade and commerce. It is not only model to the world community, but also a chapter of illustration to the global neighbors, that a small country like Bhutan, a home of monarchy can coexist with large democracy like India, which is not only one of the nuclear powers but also the country with large population existing in diversity and political harmony. It is for this prevailing network of friendship between the two nations that Bhutanese refugees take the opportunity to anticipate India's intervention into the crisis and seek help to resolve the problem both politically and socially, considering the fact that Bhutan cannot sustain or survive without the existing friendly relations at all levels of understanding and cooperation. Present stand of UNHCR Until late 90s, the UNHCR was found working for repatriation but since 2000 onwards it began working with complete U-turn that systematically discouraged the efforts of advocacy for repatriation by active campaigning, motivating and even indoctrinating the brighter side of third-country resettlement to the ignorant refugees. The concluding thoughts of the refugees thus explains that the UNHCR action is supporting Bhutan, who pushed these people out of their home. The ongoing exercises of the UNHCR thus goes to making the refugees absolutely stateless and develop distance from the hope of restoring their nationality and citizenship identity as the citizens of Bhutan. Urging international community |
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