Wednesday, August 30, 2023

The Despots Are At It, Yet Again!

The progenitors of Bhutan’s democracy are surely shedding tears of anguish at the way our democracy is shaping out. Now the Election Commission has willed that the political parties and their candidates do not have to go for door-to-door campaign during the election period.


I wonder if that is a round-about way of suggesting that the electorate should instead go to the doorsteps of the political party candidates to listen to their campaign, which is an absolute and essential part of the election process?

Jokes aside, I had suggested early this year that “Elections Can Wait” - that we should consider deferring the 4th elections to a more suitable time when we have recovered from the ongoing crisis inflicted by the COVID-19 pandemic.


I mean how many Bhutanese - the residual population after the exodus to Australia - have the inclination, or the resources, to spend money behind a trip to their village homes to cast their votes?

It is a pity that the Election Commission has thought up everything else that is anti-democracy but not that which should help the country see a robust turnout during the elections. The least the Election Commission could have done is - made it possible for voters to be able to vote from the places where they are currently domiciled - instead of having to travel long distances to cast their votes. They should have allowed Postal Ballot - for the Bhutanese diaspora. These cost-effective measures would have assured good turnout during the elections.

But frankly, why do I get this sneaky feeling that it is precisely what the Election Commission is aspiring for: poor participation by the Bhutanese citizens!

Saturday, August 26, 2023

You Found The Donkey - Now Find The Load

The KUELSEL reports in their today's newspaper that the DrukAir has established an interline arrangement with the Turkish Airlines, with the stated objective of handling passengers and their baggage.

The meaningless alliance

How nice!! Now only thing that remains to be seen is - from where will the passengers and baggage come? The answer is obvious:

J A I G A O N

Without doubt the DrukAir’s next stop in their quest for better management of passengers and baggage should be - Jaigaon. Because, given the RGoB’s enabling policies, coupled with the DrukAir's exorbitant ticket costs, the tourism operators in Jaigaon currently hold complete monopoly - total cast-iron grip over Bhutan's tourism business - atleast from Bhutan's highest potential tourism market - INDIA.

Tuesday, August 22, 2023

That The People Shall Be Amused

Once in a while there appears reports in the media that can amuse and entertain the readers - but most often it is clear that people fail to see the real implications of what they are saying or doing. Beginning from this post, I would like to attempt to record all such reports in the media, for posterity’s sake.

I believe that the following two deserves the place of honor for this maiden post on the not-so-funny guffaws.


One talks of our close to a century of aspirations for 100% organic farming - but what is quixotic is that the report actually names a number of government agencies charged with the responsibility of importing and distributing chemicals - to help the farmers achieve our national aspirations.

The other credits the Bhutanese electorate as being mature enough to decide which of the political party is likely to serve the country better - and yet he welcomes the decision of the ECB to oversee and endorse the political parties’ manifestos, through a committee to be appointed by them. It appears that the contributor misses out on the obvious - the ECB’s deliberate message to the Bhutanese electorate - that they will decide what color and shade of democracy we can have.

Saturday, August 19, 2023

Cath Lab Services at the JDWNRH

Sitting across the table facing a couple of dignified Europeans, and thanking profusely for their planned project for the people of Bhutan - I was a little unnerved to be discussing something about which I was, well and truly, clueless! But a man has gotta do what he has gotta do - and this day I needed to sound positive and competent - not necessarily knowledgeable - to handle what was being planned and proposed. As the incumbent Club Secretary of the Rotary Club of Thimphu, my principal role was to discuss, finalize and implement all Club projects, on behalf of the Rotary Club of Thimphu.

Sitting at the restaurant of the Hotel Tashi Yoedling above the Memorial Chorten, it was July of 2019. Details were being discussed - on how best to frame the proposal for a US$99,000.00 Global Grant Project, to The Rotary Foundation (TRF) - for the establishment of a Cardiac Catheterization Lab Service (Cath Lab) at the JDWNRH, Thimphu.

At the opposite end of the table were the representatives of the principal donors and proponents from Germany and Denmark - Dr. Med Wolfang Pfeiffer, Bhutan’s Consul General in Germany, Dr. Christian Wolpert, Medical Director and Professor Sam Riahi, Chief Consultant, MD, Phd., FESC, both from Aalborg University Hospital, and Member of the Rotary Club of Nibe, Denmark. They were the ones with the deep pocket - I was the one with the knowhow and the skills to put flesh to the bones.

Five years later, yesterday the 18th of August 2023 - once again at the same hotel restaurant - I sat seeping Lemon-Honey tea - opposite the same persons - Dr. Wolfang and Professor Sam, with whom we started the journey of the project that finally culminated in the successful installation of the Cath Lab at the JDWNRH. The project that was conceived and set into motion five years ago was finally a reality - it was handed over to the JDWNRH authorities on 14th of August 2023. Although I am no more a part of the Club, the international partners to the project wanted to meet me and thank me for spearheading the project during its initial phase - five years back.

I presented to Dr. Wolfang and Dr. Sam a signed copy each of my book titled "BHUTAN BIRDS" - as my private and personal appreciation to the international project team members for their tireless work for the past five years that this project took to materialize.

In between exchanging pleasantries, Professor Sam proudly shows off to me a photograph where he and Dr. Pfeiffer are seen posing with His Majesty the King of Bhutan. He tells me, gleaming with pride, that His Majesty had granted them an audience!!

He did not need me to tell him what an extremely rare privilege and honor it was for him and Dr. Wolfang. He knew it! Even beyond that, I told him that it was an acknowledgement at the highest level - both for his Club and other partnering Rotary Clubs in Europe, as well as the Rotary Club of Thimphu. It is proof, if any were needed, that the project has been recognized at the highest level. There can be no better endorsement of the value of the project. All those connected with the project should derive a sense of pride and achievement.

The Royal Government of Bhutan, it appears, also sees value in the project. Yesterday, the Hon'ble Prime Minister seems to have suitably impressed the international team during a lunch to which they were invited - with his clarity of thought and purpose.

As for me, I am touched, and thankful, that I am remembered during this moment of success and achievement - that too by the international partners, NO LESS!

As was already agreed during our initial discussion in 2019, the Cath Lab project will continue with the Phase II of the planned three phases. The IInd Phase will focus on the soft component - strengthening the HR competence at the JDWNRH. With my very best wishes, I offered them my suggestions as to how to make the IInd Phase even more meaningful and enduring. As in the words of Dr. Wolfang - the main bole of the tree is now firmly entrenched into the ground - it must now be cared for and tended to, so that it can support a profuse of branches and leaves - to benefit the people of Bhutan for many generations to come.

Sunday, August 6, 2023

Shining Example Of Democracy At Work

Bhutan probably qualifies as one of the world's youngest democracies - we began our democratic journey only in the year 2008. This means that since the democratic form of governance was first conceived in 508 BC in ancient Athens, we have more that 2,500 years of past successes and failures of the democratic cultures, systems and processes, to learn from.

It is a shame that there is no indication that we have learnt even a day’s lesson - in our past fifteen years of dabbling in what we gratefully accept is a ---- Gift from the Golden Throne.

For proof, read the following shamefully undemocratic announcement by the Election Commission of Bhutan (ECB) - supposedly the sole custodian of all that is fair and good in a democracy.

No political parties or candidates may make any pledges unless they have been approved and sanctioned by the Election Commission of Bhutan (ECB).

According to the above announcement, the Election Commission has elected themselves as both judge and jury - they made it clear that THEY WILL DECIDE - not the political parties - nor the electorate - what is good and acceptable. The Election Commission, in other words, is making it clear that they have the mandate to decide what is a good manifesto and what is not. In other words, the Election Commission has the moral authority to govern, not regulate, the political parties and the electorate.

In other words, they are saying that the electorate and the political parties have no independent role in the country's democratic process.

If this is how democracy is to function in this country, why don’t the Election Commission draw up five sets of manifestos and hand them each to the five political parties to pronounce to their electorate? Where is the need for the leaders of the political parties to break their heads to design, what they believe, are the most progressive and useful manifestos?

It is so terribly disheartening that an authority charged with the responsibility of assuring a vibrant democracy in the country should choose to behave in this most undemocratic manner. And from all signs, we are going to have to allow it.

There was a time when I used to take great pride in being known as one belonging to a country called BHUTAN. Years back, when I was invited to Hong Kong to attend a marriage party, I wore my Gho to the event - to show to the gathering of the very best from around the world that I am Bhutanese, and proud to be one. I was thrilled to be the center of attention in that star spangled gathering.

At the age of 28 I was elected to be the President of the Working Group of 19 nations during a UN/ILO international gathering. There was a sense of achievement, a sense of pride of belonging. Today I stutter and stammer - when I have no choice but admit that I am from …. Oh that country Bhutan!

We need to retrieve ourselves from this headlong plunge into the abyss of doom where we are surely headed. Each of us who claim to be Bhutanese must consider it a pride, a duty - to strive to contribute a verse, even a single word - towards achieving that end.

Remember, NO ONE WILL DO IT for us.

Saturday, August 5, 2023

For The Lack Of An Alphabet

Dear Wolfgang,

Thank you for your mail.

Yes, I have been pointing out that our “Ngueltam/Chaetam” are incorrectly spelt.






Earlier they used to be spelt correctly with the alphabet




as follows:




In due course they came to be wrongly spelt as follows:







So far the authorities have chosen to remain unimpressed by the mistakes.

It took me a long time to find out the provable cause for the mistakes. One learned Bhutanese scholar finally explained to me that the reason may have been as a consequence of the introduction of the mechanical Dzongkha typewriters in the 1970s. He explained to me that the alphabet

was missing in the mechanical typewriters’ keyboard layout. Thus, people were forced to substitute the alphabet with the word




He tells me that even he did so in his literature writings using the Dzongkha typewriter.

Regarding the expression “Tam”, “Trum” and “Tang” … I choose to spell it “Tang” because, as you know, our metal coins have their origins in the Koch Narayani who designated their coins “Tanka”, derived from the Sanskrit, meaning money.

The term “Tam” used by Tibetans …. No one has been able to explain to me convincingly what the word stands for. Thus, until I find an acceptable explanation for the other terms, I will continue to use the term “Tang”. I do not find it necessary that we should adopt the word just because the Tibetans did it - not unless there is some basis for doing so.

Sadly, Ngueltang and Chaetang that are applied to describe our modern coins and paper money are also totally wrong.

Our paper currency “Ngueltang” means = Silver Coin ---- when it is neither silver nor coin.

Our coins that came to be called "Chaetang" means = Half coin …. It is not half but a full coin.

In my next life I will choose to be reborn as the Governor of the Royal Monetary Authority of Bhutan ….. then hopefully I will have the authority to make amends 😜

Saturday, July 29, 2023

NGULTRUM / CHHETRUM: When & Why

Few of the remaining puzzles that I was faced with in my relentless research into everything related to Bhutan’s ancient hammered coins was the issue relating to when the terms NGULTRUM and CHHETRUM were coined and came into use. This was important since Bhutan formerly did not express our coins in any unit of currency. It was simply called “Maartang”, or red coin. Even when the Second King introduced modern milled silver coins for the first time in 1929, they were simply called “Thala” but inscribed with the words “Jatum Chaed” - or half Indian Rupee, on the reverse of the coin.

The right way and the wrong way of spelling

Until the terms Ngultrum and Chhetrum came into use, the Bhutanese used a variety of terms to describe money:

Ngingtang    Old Coin
Maartang    Red Coin
Zangtang    Bronze Coin
Ngueltang    Silver Coin
Sertang            Gold Coin
Thala            Half Rupee
Tikchang    Nickel Thala
Tiru                    Money
Shiki            1⁄4 Ngultrum
Shog Lor            Paper Money 

The term “Shiki” is the closest to the use of a monetary unit - it literally means "quarter of a Ngultrum", or 25 units of a currency.

There were two other terms that were in use to describe coins that were current in ancient Bhutan: "Baltang" and "Boetang". However, I am not referring to them since they were/are coins belonging to foreign countries.

Exactly when the terms Ngultrum/Chhetrum came into use is rather confusing. According to the accepted official version, they were coined and used upon the introduction of our paper currency in 1974. However, historical written records show that the terms were in existence more than a decade before 1974.

The abbreviated terms Nu. and Ch. appears in the earliest definitive stamps of Bhutan - a set of seven stamps - issued in 1962. This conclusively proves that the terms were coined in or before 1962, and not in 1974, as recorded.

Bhutan's earliest postage stamps issued in 1962. They bear the abbreviations Nu. and Ch. - twelve years before the issue of our earliest bank notes in 1974 for which history records that the terms Ngultrum and Chhetrum were coined.

What is intriguing is this: Why were the currency units Ngultrum/Chhetrum coined and used, when Bhutan did not have a designated currency in place? Why did it become necessary to introduce these units of currency? My persistent deep delve finally connects me to a collector of Bhutanese stamps and an accomplished historian from the Netherlands - Mr. Leo van der Velden - who offers the following interesting theory.

Certain articles in the successive treaties with British India government, followed by that with the government of independent India tended to give rise to some ambiguity as to the true standing of Bhutan - is it an independent state, is it not?. Thus, foremost in the minds of the Bhutanese monarchy was the need to assert the Kingdom of Bhutan’s status as an independent state, with the right to self-determination. One of the means to make that assertion was seen to be to obtain memberships to world bodies such as the Colombo Plan, the UPU and the United Nations.

Bhutan gained membership to the Colombo Plan in 1962. It now began to work on becoming a member of the UPU (Universal Postal Union). As a rule, to become a member of the UPU a country must be a member of the UN. However, an independent country could also become a member, as long as it has the support of two-thirds of existing UN members. Other requirements were supposedly that a country should have a postal service in place and should have postage stamps already printed and in use. Bhutan did not have those - thus the next step on the journey towards qualifying to become a Member of the UPU was to print our own stamps and set up a postal service. Bhutan achieved both of the requirements in 1962 - we issued our first postage stamp in 1962. In the same year we also set up our first post office in Phuentsholing.

Obviously internationally recognized postage stamps have to be denominated in units of the country’s currency. We did not have currency units those days. Thus, according to Mr. Leo van der Velden, Bhutan coined the terms Ngultrum and Chhetrum to meet the requirement of having to denominate the stamps.

A PROBLEM HALF A CENTURY OLD: Coining of the terms Ngultrum/Chhetrum may have gotten us our membership to the UPU but in our desperation to do so, we have been stuck with an anomaly that, to this day - after half a century - remains uncorrected/unrectified:

We are calling our paper money : Ngultrum = Silver Coin; and
We are calling our metal coin         : Chhetrum = Half Coin


Bhutan's paper currency superimposed with metal coin. Note the mistakes - both in English, and also in Dzongkha - both on the metal coin, as well as on the bank note.

Wednesday, July 26, 2023

Enterprise Of Epic Tragedy

My connection with the DrukAir dates back to the very start of its birth in 1981. I have the honor of having contributed to its graduation - from a tottering fledgling to a full-grown swashbuckler with international reach and spread. Even before the airline started its commercial operations, at the request of its first Calcutta-based Regional Director P S Joseph, I volunteered to fly, multiple times, their first aircraft on its many dangerously unsafe test flights between Paro and Calcutta. I even got my personal cook and my office peon and the gatekeeper to ride the aircraft - to make up the load - in order that the airline may test the airplane’s carrying capacity, and maneuverability, under diverse weather conditions and emergency situations. Much later, when the company started their commercial operations in 1983, I was among the most frequent flyers - so often that Christopher Francis, one of the earliest officers of the DrukAir declared me CIP - Commercially Important Person.


A national liability

I never thought that I would live to see the day when the state would use the same airline company as an apparatus to cause pain and grief to the very people and institutions that it was created to complement and assist. Few would have any idea of the pains and tribulations the creator of the airline - His Majesty the IVth Druk Gyalpo - went through before he was able to establish the National Flag Carrier.

I can truly commiserate with the DrukAir - if they are unable to make profit from their operations. No one can deny that they are faced with insurmountable challenges posed by nature, including the fact that achieving economies of scale is near impossible given the realities of our smallness. No sensible person with any brain can fail to accept that there are certain challenges that are beyond human competence to surmount.

I keep repeating over and over that the DrukAir was not created as an enterprise of profit. But the managers at the DHI simply cannot get the message. Sadly, that is the peril of entrusting the affairs of corporations in the hands of bureaucrats with no corporate culture or training, let alone business acumen.

DrukAir is a national institution behind which thousands of millions of public money has been spent. The least it can do is try and work towards serving the interest of the industry and the people in whose service it was created. Sadly today there does not seem to be a single person in this country with the wherewithal to see the destruction the airline is causing the people of Bhutan.

I wonder if the DrukAir is generating enough business - I repeat business, not profit - to enable it to make its monthly loan installments and the annual insurance premium on their aircrafts?

If the DrukAir is making claims that it is making profit from its operations, it has got to be at the cost of others. It should not be acceptable that for the profit of one institution, hundred others are forced to suffer. If this has been the case, clearly they are a burden to the state and the people of Bhutan.

The people of Bhutan do not need any further proof that the DrukAir is instrumental in large-scale diversion of business to others across the border, even while their own brethren are suffering, for want of opportunities. If that were not enough, it is also apparent that they have directly contributed to the drastic fall in the inflow of hundreds of millions of foreign exchange. And yet, they remain adamantly blind to the folly of their misadventures.

Look at the images of the following hotels that are among our shiniest and brightest - behold the look of gloom and darkness they wear today. Every time I pass by these hotels - my heart bleeds because they should not be looking so forlorn and gloomy. Bhutan is touted as a preferred and prize-winning destination for tourism. If that were true - these bastions of tourism should be shimmering and sparkling like a trillion stars in the night sky. Tens of thousands of tourists should be jostling for space and accommodation.

Ariya Hotel

Dorji Elementts

dusitD2 Yarkay Thimphu

Hotel Druk

Hotel Tashi Yoedling

Hotel Thimphu Towers

Le Meridien Thimphu

Norkhil Boutique Hotel & Spa

Pemako Thimphu

ThePema by Realm

Thimphu DeLuxe Hotel

The above images were shot during late evening to show the occupancy status of each of the hotels. They were shot between 23rd to 25th July, 2023; 07:12PM to 08:53PM. There were some hotels where not even one room was lit up - in difference to the sentiments of the property owners, I choose not to show them here.

From what I hear, the government is yet again contemplating another deferment of repayment of outstanding loans. That is so terribly unfair to the people of Bhutan - such a move will actually aggravate the problem even further - not solve it. Over time such mindless acts will be the cause of the collapse of the financial institutions. When that happens, it will not be the financial institutions - but the common men in the street who will lose their life’s savings.

The day may not be long in coming when the financial institutions may be left with no other choice - than to write off all the outstanding loans - and claim their dues from the Royal Government of Bhutan and the DHI/DrukAir - because they willfully and forcibly engineered the ongoing disaster prevailing in the country!

Friday, July 21, 2023

BHUTAN, Land Of Paradoxes

One cannot help but marvel at our indomitable spirit. Even as we are overwhelmed by a sense of extreme anxiety at our uncertain future, we do not fail to derive a sense of comic and humor in our countless failures. Let it not be said that the Bhutanese are NOT a spirited lot of people. 😂😂😂

For proof, check out the following:

WORSENING INEFFICEINCY
In the past the inefficiency in the service delivery by the civil service was blamed on the lazy and non-performing government employees. Now they have even better reason for the current, and even poorer service delivery: it is attributed to the large-scale exodus of the petrified public employees to Australia.

NOT SO FUNNY
In the hope of curtailing tax evasion, the Department of Revenue and Customs (DRC) had, few months back, announced that they would be checking the bank balances in the savings bank accounts of the people. It is not clear how successful the drive would have been - but one thing was left in no doubt - it is rumored that the announcement caused a dangerous, and historic, even if minor, “bank run” - resulting in a massive withdrawal of cash from the banks by worried depositors. Unconfirmed reports say that it caused an unheard of situation of shortage of bank notes! The falling foreign exchange reserve was problem enough - but this was so unexpected. It is not very common that banks run out of currency notes. By itself this is not a problem - currency notes can be printed and reissued, and replenished. Now, had the banks run out of deposits, that would have been a different matter. But obviously the problem was not so severe - few, if any, seem to have heard of the "run".

SHORTAGE OF TEACHERS
The Education Minister recently declared that the country has a shortage of 842 teachers across the country.

The Royal Government of Bhutan spends millions every year - in training schoolteachers in two of the country’s teacher training colleges. At the end of the training period they are required to sit for an interview to qualify to be employed as teachers in government schools, conducted by the RCSC. Strangely, during the selection process a large number of them are declared unfit to teach. It does not seem like a creative thing to do - to train the teachers absolutely free of cost - only to be declared unfit for the job for which the government had trained them, over many years.

Train them until they are unfit for the job!

THE DARK SIDE OF OUR HYDROPOWER PROJECTS
Bhutan claims that our hydropower projects are run-of-the-river projects that produce “clean” energy. Our claim to being the world’s only carbon negative country is primarily based on our claim that we help off-set use of fossil fuel and that 70% of our country is forested.

And yet, the truth is that the planned PHPA-I Dam will rise to a staggering height of 130 Mtrs. (426 ft.) when completed, if ever. The massive destruction caused to the environment during and after the construction phase, including the emission of methane gas, post construction, goes unreported. Also, we ignore the fact that not all our forests contain CO2 sequestering trees.

The true face of hydropower projects revealed!

COUNTRY WITH THE MOST PRISTINE ENVIRONMENT
We pride ourselves as a champion of environmental conservation with strong laws to safeguard the natural world. Protection of the environment is supposed to be one of the four pillars of our famous GNH philosophy. But it does not appear that our record is as clean, or admirable, as we would like to believe, or put out. We may be among the only countries in the world against which a PIL is filed in the Supreme Court - by a foreign country.
Historic incidence of acid rain in the country

Another historic event for Bhutan - champion of environmental conservation being slapped with a PIL in India's Supreme Court - for extreme pollution!

COUNTRY WITH THE WORLD’s HIGHEST WATER RESOURCE
Bhutan has one of the highest per capita availability of water in the world. Official figures show that Bhutan generates about 70,500 million m3 of water annually, meaning each Bhutanese should ideally have access to about 94,500 m3 of water per person per year. And yet, we suffer from problem of chronic water shortage - both for drinking as well as for farming/irrigation.

Water, Water everywhere, not a drop to drink

OUR CLAIM OF ORGANIC FARMING
For the past many decades we have made the claim that our farm produces are organically grown and have pooh-poohed at the imported stuff. The ugly truth seems to be something else. It appears that we are clueless as to what constitutes organic farming. Contrary to claims, going by the figures released by the Department of Agriculture last year, it is clear that we impregnate 2% (current total land area under cultivation) of our land with incredible 3,405,500.00 KGs of chemical substances such as fertilizer/weedicide/pesticide etc.

Proof that we practice organic farming?

Thursday, July 20, 2023

44% Dip In The Inflow Of Indian Rupee

Today's KUENSEL reports that Indian Rupee earning has dipped by 44%!

The writing on the wall

According to the most recent data released by the Department of Tourism (DoT), during the 9 months period between September 2022 to June 26, 2023, a staggering 49,714 Indian tourists visited Bhutan. Based on these figures, let us do a simple math.

Let us consider that one Indian would spend a minimum of Rs.2,500.00 per day, including SDF, hotel, food, guide, monument fees, transportation and other small expenses. Let us say that they spend on the average four nights in the country. This would work out to:

49,714 x 2,500.00 x 4 = Rs.497,140,000.00

In addition to the expense listed above, they would have to have spent a good bit of amount on airfare. But the truth is that not even 2,000 of the total 49,714 Indian tourists travelled by DrukAir - given the extremely exorbitant airfare charged by the airline, they chose to fly into Bagdogra and travel overland through Jaigaon.

For a moment lets say that the DrukAir dismounts from their high horse and slashes their fare by 50% of the current round trip fare charged by them. Even at that amount, the sum would work out to roughly:

49,714 x Rs.40,000.00 = Rs.1,988,560,000.00

The sad reality is that there is not even a trickle of the Indian Rupee coming into Bhutan because the Jaigaon operators who usurp the tourism business from national operators pay tour payments in local Ngultrum.

Because the DrukAir charges unreasonably exorbitant airfare, the Indian tourists do not fly DrukAir. Instead they enter through Jaigaon - causing loss of revenue for the airline and wholesale deflection of tourist traffic to Jaigaon operators.

If the DrukAir were to be reasonable with their fares, all the Indian tourists would enter through Paro airport …. meaning all of them would come through Bhutanese tour operators thereby necessitating the tourists to make payment in Rupees directly to Bhutanese operators - instead of the payments ending up into the bank accounts of the Jaigaon operators.

And you wonder why there is 44% dip in the inflow of Indian Rupee?

I keep saying that we should tap into the Indian tourist market - they represent the most substantial and the most lucrative for Bhutan. Handled with care, Indian tourist arrivals could go as high as half a million per year!

Remember, our imports from India is as high as 80% …. meaning the Rupee is as important as the $$, if not more.

Monday, July 17, 2023

The Waning Ngar & The Failing Bhutanese GenZ

I do not expect that it will make much difference even if I should climb atop the Mt. Gungkhar Puensoom and yell from its peak - in all likelihood it would be no more than a cry in the wilderness. And yet, no person with any conscience can remain calm and unaffected, in the face of so much recklessness. It is not that I find fault behind the reason or the cause of the sudden stampede for Australia - it is the fact that it appears that most of the dream chasers are doing so with their EYES SHUT TIGHT.

It is sad. I am aware - and I have said this so many times in the past - that the Bhutanese are not a thinking lot. But we do have a mind - although even that is now becoming doubtful. No one appointed me moral guardian of the Bhutanese people - unfortunately I cannot help but worry that what is happening today has the potential to completely derail the country and cause it mortal injury.


The mindless chase for the Australian Visa seems to have awoken the hitherto slumbering Lucifer in us - the latent scoundrel has risen. Our moral probity has fallen so low that parents and siblings think nothing of condoning adultery and even incest. Even the law seems to willingly put its stamp of approval on the many cases of false declarations. Our immorality knows no bound - I am told that some stoop so low as to allow his/her spouse to be pronounced legally wedded to someone else - merely for the sake of a piece of paper called Australian Visa, and to be able to embark on a journey of infinite uncertainty.

Money? Human decency? I think we know which one will win over the other. The question then arises: Is it worth losing sleep over something that apparently is already a lost cause?

I believe that it may still be worth it, despite the apparent hopelessness. Some people have finally begun to speak of the dark side of the great Australian dream - as opposed to the fairy tale that has so far been put out. At last, some conversation is happening. The Kuensel’s last Friday issue (15/07/2023) carried the following front-page article:

The start of the rumblings

In response to my last post titled “The Irresistible Bhutanese Itch”, a retired senior member of the society decided to finally squeak a few words - he wrote:

     “Is it fair for children born as Bhutanese who were educated by the state to leave everything to the
     head of the state?”

One anonymous reader commented on my blog:

     “I beg to differ from the negative outlook on the Aussie exodus but shall not argue my case here”

In response to the above comment, a brilliant reader from the USA sends me a WhatsApp message that reads:

     “I wish the anonymous commenter would have argued his case in public on your blog. I’d be curious
     how he is justifying the exodus to Australia”.

Another friend outside the country commented:

     “It may be time Bhutan opens up. Or there may be no Bhutan GenZs left”.

Yet another reader comments:

     “Bhutan should seriously consider dual citizenship to attract that ‘70%’ back home”.

We need to talk about this and we need to do it yesterday - tomorrow may be too late. Perhaps one way to halt the zombie-like march is to counter it with what lies hidden underneath the carpet - expose the inconvenient truths! Or, may be we are destined, like I said in my last post, to wait for nature’s curative ways to come to our rescue.

Most will likely say that there is no opportunity within the country. That would be too simplistic a viewpoint to take. For a change we could learn to look at the issue from another point of view: opportunities do not exist - we create them for ourselves!

Now you know where His Majesty’s talk of waning of the “Ngar” comes from - and the letdown by the GenZ that my friend spoke about above.

I know that the issue is very complex and taking the moral high ground is least of the answer to solving our many problems. The human animal has always been a habitual wanderer - journeying across the far-flung continents and the seven seas. It would be so terribly wrong to see fault in our modern day fortune seekers. But we have to remember that we never failed to balance our priorities - the voyages have always brought back home wealth, prosperity, and human progress.

We need to make sure hat we remain true to our basic nature.

Thursday, July 13, 2023

The Irresistible Bhutanese Itch

Hi Nel,
Thank you for your WhatsApp message - I chose to reply to you in an eMail since your questions call for lengthy answers. And thank you for asking ---- I am well, including all my family members.

I am surprised that the matter got reported in the local papers in the UK - amazing that a pint-sized Bhutan gets to feature in international news - actually we also made it to a respectable newspaper in Australia - on the 5th of this month.


As much as I wish I could deny it, the reports are true --- there has been a steady exodus of young and educated Bhutanese to Australia. It is a worrisome trend that does not look like it is going to halt until the country is completely drained of the young and the educated. And you are right - it is a disturbing problem - even worst, it is a complex problem. Tiny Bhutan is now straddled with a problem so COLOSSAL that we are not sure that we have the wherewithal to handle it. Any which way we look at it, it does not seem like there is one single magic formula to solve the problem that confronts us. In fact indications are that desperation is now beginning to cloud our better judgment. And yet there is no sign that the glitter and sparkle in the eyes of the Bhutanese youth are going to dim anytime soon.

WHAT ARE MY THOUGHTS?
You ask what my thoughts are. May be a little jumbled and haphazard but the following are the ones that mostly invade my mind - first thing in the morning as I wake up, and through out the rest of the day.

At the core of our problem is the famous Bhutanese herd mentality - we cannot help but succumb to a nature that is intrinsic to our personality. Like the Army Ants, we march because every one else is marching - unmindful of what is being trampled on our path. It is easy to trigger an itch in us - we do not need a reason or a justification - we just need an excuse - an excuse that every one else is itching.

And that proves my long held belief - that we Bhutanese are as unique as every one else; that Bhutan will embrace modernity as every one else have done before us - that we will get where everyone already have - it is just a matter of time. Give us time and the Bhutanese will do even worst!

I believe that behind the exodus to Australia there is no sound logic, it is not a result of a properly researched outcome - it is not a quest driven by reason. I fear that a large number of them are going simply because everyone else are seen to be going. It will not be fair to say that they have been driven by greed - I am told that there are a variety of reasons, some of them even justifiable.

Unfortunately the reality will be that the country they love will suffer; over the long haul, their kith and kin will feel the impact of their unfounded haste and, perhaps, the very life most of them had hoped for, and the dreams they choose to dream - will turn out be just that - a distant dream.

From all accounts Bhutan is headed for a seriously rough time. All the signs are that we have already hit the stormy waters. People even opine that there is already a palpable air of doom - certainly there is cause for worry. But I believe that the moment of despair is not yet upon us.

Your connection with Bhutan dates back to the 1960’s - but the truth is that your connection to Bhutan has been, at best, superficial. I do not believe that you have had any reason, or occasion, to study Bhutan from close quarters.

Officially the Wangchuck Dynasty has ruled us since 1907 - unofficially they have been doing so since 1853. Since then, Bhutan has survived natural and man-made calamities galore, external threats and internal strife - but we have emerged unscathed. The Bhutanese people have every reason and faith that this time too, we will be ably steered to safety by our Monarch. He is working tirelessly - and He understands that He is the King - and that it is not in His job description to give up.

And, like my blog masthead reads, we all pray that He Never Gives Up Hope!

As to the problem of the exodus, I do not see how we can solve it without upsetting the apple cart. Perhaps nature will do it for us - I have great faith in it - nature is a great equalizer. And nature has always been kind to Bhutan. May be there will be a great natural calamity - may be there will be another devastating pandemic that will cause and kick off the reversal of Bhutanese migration. One never knows - nature has been unfailing in its well-timed interventions - it gave us Genghis Khan, the Black Death, Mata Hari, Rasputin, Hitler, Mussolini, WW I & II, The Little Boy and The Fat Man, Mahatma Gandhi, Israel, Osama bin Laden etc.

The unspoken and unwritten financial burden (outside of the borrowings from financial institutions) caused by the migration is massive - not many have an understanding of its extent and enormity. Regardless, there is increasing indication that the country and the people of Bhutan may not be able to recoup the financial outlay that has gone behind financing the migration. This doubt arises out of most people’s fear that more than 70% of the migrants are unlikely to return home. Couple that with the falling birth rate of the country ….. and you have a perfect recipe for disaster that calls for serious consideration.

But we have not lost our hope - in our Monarch, and history, we trust!

Bye and take care …. I will reply to your other matters in a day or two.

Yeshey