• Text size Normal size text | Increase text size by 10% | Increase text size by 20% | Increase text size by 30%

The other election: Bhutanese refugees in Nepal vote to elect their camp management representatives

News Stories, 5 May 2006

© UNHCR/A.Khatoon
Bhutanese refugees in Nepal held elections this week for their camp representatives, casting ballot papers in containers usually used to store drinking water.

DAMAK, Nepal, May 5 (UNHCR) As Nepal waits for a decision on elections for a Constituent Assembly, another group has held its own, peaceful vote to elect its representatives. Starting last Tuesday, Bhutanese refugees in Nepal cast their ballots to elect representatives for camp management.

There was a festive mood as over the course of three days from May 2-4 refugees lined up to vote for the person they believed should represent them in dealing with the host community, the government of Nepal, UNHCR and its partners.

To make sure that everyone voted for the person of their choice, names of the candidates were listed on coloured chart paper and posted in each of the bamboo and thatch voting centres. The centres were built in several locations in each of the camps, which are home to over 100,000 Bhutanese refugees in the south east of the country. Voters wrote the number or the name of the candidate and dropped their ballot in a traditional water storage container.

Since the establishment of the camps in 1992, elections have become an annual event. Refugees eagerly looked forward to election day and the opportunity to exercise their democratic right to vote even though it was in a refugee camp far from their homeland.

To standardise refugee elections in Nepal, an electoral panel is formed each year. It is headed by the government authority and includes UNHCR, the World Food Programme, non-governmental organisations and refugee representatives. The elections are conducted according to set guidelines which allow one male and one female member of each household in the camp over 18 years of age to vote. Those elected as representatives form a committee, called the Camp Management Committee, which acts on behalf of the camp residents to liaise with the relevant authorities and agencies and to coordinate the day-to-day management of the camps.

"We want refugees to fully exercise their right to elect their representatives, and the role of UNHCR is to assist the process," said UNHCR Representative in Nepal Abraham Abraham.

"Bhutanese refugees are very democratic and have always appreciated the electoral mechanism for representing themselves," added Abraham.

Campaigning was done throughout the weeks of April, with the candidates holding rallies in the camps and going from hut to hut to discuss their individual qualifications to represent the refugees.

Young people in the camp were also involved in the process of ensuring that efficient and trustworthy people were elected. They got candidates to fill in a questionnaire in which they had to explain, among other things how they planned, should they win, to achieve a permanent and lasting solution for their fellow Bhutanese refugees.

"Youth is power and we want to fully support the representatives in their plans for the betterment of the conditions in the camps and for achieving lasting solutions to our plight," said Bhim Subedi, a student from Beldangi I refugee camp.

In the run-up to the elections, UNHCR worked to get more women involved in the process to ensure good diversity among the candidates. This resulted in just over 50 per cent female candidates standing in the elections, the first time that women have been equally represented as candidates for the Camp Management Committees.

"A noteworthy development concerning women's participation in the elections were the changes made in the Camp Management Committee Election Guidelines in 2005," Abraham said. "These included the formation of core groups in the camps comprising both men and women who work camp-wide to increase the representation and support of women in taking up leadership roles."

In most of the camps, men won the head of the committee or the camp secretary posts. But, after a long gap of several years, this time a female candidate won the elections as camp secretary in one of the camps.

Women in the camp were pleased at being better represented. "It is always easier to relate with female representatives as they understand our problems and issues better," said one female voter.

"The increased and active participation of women in the elections is highly encouraging," said Abraham. "To have more participation of women in the decision-making process is one of our prime objectives and fully consistent with UNHCR's policy for achieving gender equality in all aspects of our work."

By Nini Gurung in Damak, Nepal

• DONATE NOW • • GET INVOLVED • • STAY INFORMED •

 

UNHCR country pages

How UNHCR Helps Women

By ensuring participation in decision-making and strengthening their self-reliance.

Women

Women and girls can be especially vulnerable to abuse in mass displacement situations.

Women in Exile

In any displaced population, approximately 50 percent of the uprooted people are women and girls. Stripped of the protection of their homes, their government and sometimes their family structure, females are particularly vulnerable. They face the rigours of long journeys into exile, official harassment or indifference and frequent sexual abuse, even after reaching an apparent place of safety. Women must cope with these threats while being nurse, teacher, breadwinner and physical protector of their families. In the last few years, UNHCR has developed a series of special programmes to ensure women have equal access to protection, basic goods and services as they attempt to rebuild their lives.

On International Women's Day UNHCR highlights, through images from around the world, the difficulties faced by displaced women, along with their strength and resilience.

Women in Exile

Refugee Women

Women and girls make up about 50 percent of the world's refugee population, and they are clearly the most vulnerable. At the same time, it is the women who carry out the crucial tasks in refugee camps – caring for their children, participating in self-development projects, and keeping their uprooted families together.

To honour them and to draw attention to their plight, the High Commissioner for Refugees decided to dedicate World Refugee Day on June 20, 2002, to women refugees.

The photographs in this gallery show some of the many roles uprooted women play around the world. They vividly portray a wide range of emotions, from the determination of Macedonian mothers taking their children home from Kosovo and the hope of Sierra Leonean girls in a Guinean camp, to the tears of joy from two reunited sisters. Most importantly, they bring to life the tremendous human dignity and courage of women refugees even in the most difficult of circumstances.

Refugee Women

International Women's Day

More than 70 per cent of all refugees are women and children. Stripped of the protection of their homes, their government and often their family structure, females are particularly vulnerable. They face the rigours of long journeys into exile, official harassment or indifference and frequent sexual abuse. International Women's Day provides us with an opportunity to honour the resilience and strength of these women.

International Women's Day

Survivors, Protectors, Providers: Refugee Women speak OutPlay video

Survivors, Protectors, Providers: Refugee Women speak Out

Women and girls from around the world share their experiences of sacrifice and inspiration.
Haiti: Living in FearPlay video

Haiti: Living in Fear

UNHCR is working with a grassroots group in Haiti to help displaced women raped since last year's earthquake to get back on their feet.
Philippines: Sex Strike Brings PeacePlay video

Philippines: Sex Strike Brings Peace

Displaced women in two villages on Mindanao Island find an unconventional way to stop their menfolk fighting, clear roads and start rebuilding amid a separatist rebellion.