Updated Monday, May 12, 2008 0:00 am TWN, dpa Nepal sends 420 Bhutanese refugees to other countriesA total of 422 refugees were sent to the United States, New Zealand, Canada and other countries since the program began earlier this year, Annapurna Post reported. Nepalese security officials quoted the International Organization for Migration as saying the process was continuing and another batch of 19 refugees were to leave Nepal for a third-country settlement this week, the newspaper said. More than 107,000 Bhutanese refugees, mainly of Nepali origin are housed in seven refugee camps in Jhapa and Mornag district in eastern Nepal. The refugees began arriving in Nepal in the early 1990s alleging the Bhutanese government of persecution on the basis of their religion, culture and language. Several rounds of high level talks between Nepal and Bhutan failed to resolve the deadlock. The United States has said it could eventually resettle over 60,000 refugees. Some other countries including Norway, New Zealand and Canada have also said they will resettle the refugees but have not made public the numbers they are willing to take in. Bhutan in the past has insisted that the refugees in the U.N. run camps in eastern Nepal are not Bhutanese nationals despite most refugees possessing Bhutanese government identification documents. Officials say they have received applications from over 30,000 refugees so far for the settlement programs and the number was expected to rise. The resettlement program has been opposed to refugee groups who favor repatriation back to Bhutan as the only solution, which has led to rising tension in the refugee camps. Last year, the Nepalese government clamped a curfew in the refugee camps after tensions escalated between rival refugee groups over the resettlement process. | Other Breaking News Most Read |