With the Maoist terror extending across virtually the whole of Nepal, otherissues plaguing the country have tended to be brushed under the carpet. Underthe shadow of this neglect, at least some of these have been compounded by theenveloping troubles, and the problem of the refugees from Bhutan is one amongthese.
During his three-country visit in October 2004, covering Bhutan, India andNepal, the US Assistant Secretary of State for Population, Migration andRefugees, Arthur E. Gene Dewey had expressed Washington's increasing concernover the deteriorating situation in the refugee camps in Nepal's easternDistrict of Jhapa. Quoting reports, Dewey said, "Nepali Maoists haveinfiltrated in camps," and further urged India to play a more pro-activerole in resolving the refugee question before it turns into an intractablesecurity issue.
Earlier, on June 2, 2004, Royal Nepalese Army (RNA) forces had conducted acordon-and-search operation in a Bhutanese refugee camp, Beldangi-I, on atip-off that suspected Maoists were holed up in the camp, and subsequentlyarrested six refugees for their connections with the Maoists. Security forceshad also seized some arms from the camp, and also found many refugees missingfrom their designated camps. These missing refugees were suspected to havejoined the Nepali Maoists' People's Liberation Army (PLA).
Over 105, 000 Bhutanese Refugees reside in seven camps in the eastern Districtsof Nepal since the ethnic exodus that followed implementation in Bhutan of theCitizenship Act of 1985 and the subsequent nation-wide Census of 1988.Protesting against the results of the Census, which had identified a large'non-national' population believed to be illegal Nepali immigrants living in thesouthern part of Bhutan, and thought to be quantitatively 'diluting' theBhutanese population in that region, some of the 'illegal immigrants' wereinvolved in an unprecedented spate of attacks on human and institutional targetsin late 1989 and early 1990. These incidents were followed by the forcefuleviction or distress migration of a majority of the Nepali population from thesouthern Bhutan region, eventually confining them to designated camps in Nepal.
Since then, the refugee issue has been one of great contention between theGovernments of Nepal and Bhutan. Though a process for their repatriationcommenced in 1993, there has been little forward movement over the intervening14 years. After 15 rounds of Ministerial Joint Committee (MJC) meetings, theJoint Verification Committee (JVC) had categorized some 12,000 refugees.However, this process was also stalled when the refugees attacked the Bhutaneseverification officials at the Kudunabari camp in Jhapa on December 22, 2003,reportedly for the 'provocative and derogatory conditions' being imposed forrepatriation, and after refugees demanded that their properties be restored tothem in their homeland in Bhutan.
With world powers and the international organizations expressing renewedinterest in refugee repatriation process, the potential threat they constituteto the host state has also come into focus. Analysts suggest that such a threathas three dimensions: social security, economic security, and politicalsecurity, and point to the following circumstances: