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UNHCR in new move on Bhutanese refugees

[Nepal] Young Bhutanese boys outside Nepal’s Khundunabari refugee camp in southeastern Jhapa district, home to an estimated 13,500 residents. There are an estimated 107,000 Bhutanese refugees in the Himalayan nation. [Date picture taken: 19/04/2007] David Swanson/IRIN

In a move to resolve the crisis faced by over 108,000 Bhutanese refugees, the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR) is all set to have direct talks with the Bhutanese government to discuss repatriating the refugees to their homes and exploring other possible options.

"There is a clear preference of the Bhutanese refugees to return home and that has to be respected," UN High Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres told IRIN in the Nepali capital, Kathmandu, before his departure for Bhutan on Thursday.

"Despite 16 years with little success, we will continue to knock on Bhutan's door to seek a solution for those who want to go back," Guterres said.

Guterres arrived in Nepal on Tuesday, his first official visit to the refugee camps in eastern Nepal where the UNHCR and Nepalese government set up camps in 1990 to provide shelter for Bhutanese citizens of Nepalese origin.

Known as Lhotsampas in Bhutan, they were forcibly evicted from their homes by the Bhutanese government, which introduced a new law stripping them of citizenship and civil rights because of their Nepalese ancestry.

Optimism

''...we will continue to knock on Bhutan's door to seek a solution for those who want to go back.''
The refugees have been pleading for help from the UN to send them home for many years and are now quite optimistic owing to the visit by the high commissioner.

"All doors were closed until now. We are very encouraged by recent interest in resettling some of the refugees," explained Guterres, referring to the United States' offer to accept some 60,000 of the refugees. Other countries have expressed similar interest. However, he said the refugees should be allowed to return home if that was their wish.

According to the refugees, nearly 15 rounds of talks between the governments of Nepal and Bhutan to resolve the problem have come to nothing. The refugees are becoming ever more desperate, their health is worsening and their children mostly are not able to attend school, aid workers say.

Visit to Goldhap camp

More on Bhutanese refguees in Nepal
 Food aid for Bhutanese refugees in jeopardy
 Bhutanese refugee census nears completion
 Bhutanese refugees and locals clash over resources
During his visit to one of the biggest Bhutanese refugee camps, Goldhap camp in eastern Nepal, nearly 700km east of Kathmandu, Guterres told the refugees that everyone should have the freedom to make his or her own informed decision.

"The UNHCR's only agenda is the people - their needs and their will," he said. "We cannot play god. The option of resettlement or voluntary repatriation is for them to choose and decide. Our job is to open as many doors as possible so that they can leave the long years of exile behind them and start a new life as soon as possible."

The UNHCR has started an information campaign to raise awareness among refugees in all seven camps about resettlement procedures and their individual right to decide.

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This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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