U.N. resumes full food aid to Bhutan refugees in Nepal
KATHMANDU (Reuters) - The U.N. food agency has resumed full supplies of food rations to tens of thousands of Bhutanese refugees in Nepal with the help of aid from Australia, a month after the financial crisis curbed the programme.
About 90,000 refugees of ethnic Nepali origin live in United Nations-supervised camps in southeast Nepal since they began fleeing Bhutan in the early 1990s, alleging human rights violations and discrimination.
With no legal right to work or own land, the exiles are almost entirely dependent on food aid.
But in October, the World Food Programme cut food assistance by half, saying it was facing a cash crunch.
Australia has provided $460,000 to the agency, which was now able to feed them, a WFP statement said on Monday.
Nepal and neighbouring Bhutan have failed to repatriate all the refugees despite several rounds of talks that have strained relations between the two South Asian nations.
About 20,000 refugees have been resettled in several Western countries, including Australia under a third country resettlement programme launched two years ago.
(Reporting by Gopal Sharma; Editing by Rina Chandran)
© Thomson Reuters 2010 All rights reserved
AIDING GREECE
Eurozone agree in principle to aid Greece - source
Euro zone countries decide to help debt-stricken Greece. Full Article | Video
India rethinks Afghan policy
An initiative by Western powers seeking peace with the Taliban in Afghanistan is forcing India to modify its policy toward the hardline Islamists to avoid being marginalised. Full Article
Good for Afghanistan efforts
An easing of tension between India and Pakistan should help U.S.-led efforts to stabilise Afghanistan. Full Article










