Dhan Kumar Rai, Dubbed the Nelson Mandela of Bhuta
Dhan Kumar Rai, Dubbed the Nelson Mandela of Bhuta
Kathmandu, Nov 15 (IANS) A 45-year-old Bhutanese of
Nepali origin, who was
released from prison after 17
years by the Bhutan government this month,
has been
forced to take shelter in refugee camps in Nepal.
The
expulsion of Dhan Kumar Rai, dubbed the Nelson Mandela of
Bhutan by
Nepal’s media for his long imprisonment,
comes after the coronation of a
new king and Bhutan’s
well-publicised plans of reform and modernisation.
Rai,
who arrived in Kathmandu for medical treatment Friday, is
suffering
from heart and mental problems.
One of the
founding members of the exiled Bhutan People’s Party, he
was
earlier forced to leave Bhutan in 1989 when the Druk
government began a
crackdown on ethnic citizens,
especially those of Nepali origin.
He fled to West Bengal
in India where two years after his escape he was
arrested
by police from the Dooars area and handed over to Bhutan.
The
28-year-old was accused of sedition, terrorism and
attempt to murder and
was sent to the central
prison.
Rai says there were 74 more Nepali-speaking
Bhutanese prisoners in the
same prison block.
Rai and
three other political prisoners of Nepali origin -
Manbahadur
Moktan, Ratna Thapa and Indrajit Pulami - were
released Nov 1, five days
before the coronation of
Bhutan’s fifth king Jigme Khesar Namgyel
Wangchuck,
reportedly due to pressure by the International Red
Cross
Society and other international human rights
organisations.
However, he could not view the three-day
lavish coronation ceremony. Rai
was given 48 hours to
quit Bhutan.
On Nov 5, he arrived in Khudunabari in east
Nepal where his brother and
other family members have
been living since fleeing Bhutan in the 1980s.
The freed
activist says there are still about 100 political prisoners
in
the Chemgang Jail where he was held. He says he saw
six prisoners die due
to torture inside the
prison.
Rai’s arrival in Nepal comes at a time when the
previous government of
Nepal, despairing of ever getting
Bhutan to agree to take back the over
100,000 refugees
languishing in Nepal, gave its nod to six
Western
countries to resettle the refugees.
Over 6,000
refugees have left the camps and are now trying to make a
new
life for themselves in the US, New Zealand, Australia
and Canada. In the
coming days, more refugees are likely
to be resettled abroad.
The exodus is being opposed by
exiled Bhutanese political parties who feel
if the camps
are empty, Bhutan will be emboldened to evict still
more
ethnic
citizens.
ENDS