Do More With Reuters

Exiles say they are forgotten in Bhutan vote

Mon Mar 24, 2008 11:37pm IST
 
Email | Print | | Single Page
[-] Text [+]

By Gopal Sharma

KATHMANDU (Reuters) - Bhutan may be hailing the birth of democracy with its first parliamentary poll on Monday, but the vote has excluded thousands of exiles who fled or were expelled from the Himalayan kingdom after democracy protests in 1990.

Many exiles say the election is a farce, while others say they may never see their homeland again as they head to Western countries in a resettlement programme this year.

"These have been a tiring 17 years when we hoped we would be able to go home," said Tila Rupa Acharya, who languished in a refugee camp in southern Nepal before signing up to resettle in the United States.

"It has not happened. I don't want to come back now."

Acharya was one thousands of refugees leaving for the United States under a deal to resettle some 107,000 Bhutanese of ethnic Nepali origin who fled Bhutan or were expelled after demanding democracy and speaking out against discrimination in 1990.

Many exiles say Bhutan's elections would not solve the problem of the tens of thousands of refugees.

"The election is a farce," said Rajman Gurung, who sells spices and oranges in the Timai refugee camp inside Nepal. "As long as they don't include the 130,000 refugees, how can it be a fair election?"

The resettlement programme has the exiles divided, with the older generation yearning to return home to Bhutan and the younger ones looking to find their fortune in the West.  Continued...

Photo
Photo

Catch the latest news, pictures, stats and live race commentary on our special Formula 1 page.  Full Coverage