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May 12, 2010

His Majesty the King George Tupou V

His Majesty the King George Tupou V of the Kingdom of Tonga arrived in the country on a five-day official visit today.

On arrival at the Paro airport He was received by Her Royal Highness the Princess Ashi Sonam Dechan Wangchuck, Cabinet Ministers, speaker of the National Assembly, the National Council Chairperson, the Opposition Leader and other senior government officials.

This is his third visit to Bhutan. He visited Bhutan in 2002 and 2007. His Majesty King George Tupou V ascended the throne on September 10, 2006 following the demise of his father His Majesty King Tupou IV at the age of 88 years.

Later, at the Taj Tashi Hotel He was received by His Royal Highness the Prince Jigyel Ugyen Wangchuck.

Tonga is a Kingdom, roughly the size of Japan, in the Pacific Ocean.

Source: BBS
His Majesty the King George Tupou V of the Kingdom of Tonga arrived in the country on a five-day official visit today.

On arrival at the Paro airport He was received by Her Royal Highness the Princess Ashi Sonam Dechan Wangchuck, Cabinet Ministers, speaker of the National Assembly, the National Council Chairperson, the Opposition Leader and other senior government officials.

This is his third visit to Bhutan. He visited Bhutan in 2002 and 2007. His Majesty King George Tupou V ascended the throne on September 10, 2006 following the demise of his father His Majesty King Tupou IV at the age of 88 years.

Later, at the Taj Tashi Hotel He was received by His Royal Highness the Prince Jigyel Ugyen Wangchuck.

Tonga is a Kingdom, roughly the size of Japan, in the Pacific Ocean.

Source: BBS

Bhutan: online system Security Clearance Certificate

The initiative to ease obtaining security clearance certificate (SCC) through an online system will run on a trial basis, starting today, for a month.

The system will be formally launched after June 11, to allow people from any part of the country with internet facility to process the certificate online. “It’ll take time to reach everywhere instantly, because some places aren’t connected with internet,” said home ministry’s assistant information and media officer, Jigme Singye.

Villagers would have to visit police outposts, which would be equipped with the new system, until the facility is extended to the 205 gewog administration offices. “The gewog administrative officer will guide villagers to register online.” Jigme Singye said. If the gewog is not connected with internet, villagers will have to go to dzongkhag police station.

Jigme Singye said that, along with the trial run, they would observe how helpful the system was and get views and feedback from the people. “Through feedback, if required, then we’ll advance the system,” he said. “We’ll also study how many people apply for the certificate in a day.”

Security clearance certificate is one of the most important document a Bhutanese must have to apply for citizenship, employment, licenses, higher education, promotions, travel documents and loans.

SCC generated through the trial run will however remain invalid. “People should follow the regular procedure to produce certificates till then.” Jigme said.

With the system, an applicant is expected to receive the certificate within 24 hours of registration. Applicants will have the option of checking the status of their applications. Depending on applicants’ information, certificates will either be approved, left pending or rejected by law and order bureau, census and registration division and the police in Thimphu.

With the new update system, applicants can check the status of their application with citizenship card instead of memorising a unique number to track the status. People can re-submit the SCC application, if it is rejected or is left pending, without having to repeat the whole process with just the use of an identity card.

Once the formalities are done, no paper certificate as such will be issued, but a soft copy would be e-mailed to the concerned person. “The whole idea of not letting the applicants print SCC is to be make the system environment-friendly,” Jigme said.

The service is available at http://scs.rbp.gov.bt.

Source: Kuenselonline

May 11, 2010

Lyonchhoen attributes to combined Bhutanese efforts

India and Pakistan, two nations wrought under a spell of belligerence, returned to their respective nations yesterday, back to talking terms, amid hopes of forging ahead with a new peace process.

Afghanistan president Hamid Karzai and some other SAARC delegates were seen performing Trashi Labey in Bhutanese national dress at the Bhutan house, the night before leaving the kingdom.

Some delegates were said to have been moved to tears from the hospitality they received in Bhutan and the Bhutanese ambience, which helped them, for once, forget all troubles back home, on the day they were flying back.

They had promised to return, but without any official strings attached.

Although modest, the climate that the country had set for the SAARC heads of states to meet, they had said, would be difficult for nations, which will host the Summit next, to match.

All that was made possible, Lyonchhoen Jigmi Y Thinley said, because Bhutanese came together to ensure the success of an event of national and regional importance.

Heads of states and delegates, who attended the summit, along with observers and media representatives, Lyonchhoen said, left the country greatly satisfied and convinced that they were leaving with a unique experience.

“The experience of having observed a nation fulfilling a responsibility of an association, of which they have become a member despite many limitations,” he said. “They have seen how the people of this little country can come together to fulfill obligations that were indeed enormous.”

He explained that the DPT government undertook such a responsibility, against many who thought it was unreasonable and beyond the country’s means.

“I’d full confidence in the people of Bhutan, a country where we’ve always united against odds in the interest of the tsa-wa-süm (triple gem),” Lyonchhoen said.

The summit was important, he said, in the enhancement of the country’s sovereignty, in projecting it as one pursuing a unique development path and deserving sympathy and support of the global community.

He attributed the summit’s success to their Majesties the King and the fourth King and the royal family members for inspiration, valuable guidance and support, His Holiness for the blessings and dratsangs, drubdays and chhoedays whoch performed kurims.

“They propitiated our guardian deities and blessed us with a wonderful three days at a time when we were experiencing strong winds and heavy rainfall,” Lyonchhoen said.

The guests admired the quality of the services rendered, which he said was because civil servants, particularly in Thimphu and Paro, worked at odd hours from planning and management down to sweeping and cleaning toilets.

The welcome team, comprising principals, teachers and students, who stood along the main Thimphu-Paro highway giving dignitaries a feeling of joyous welcome extended on behalf of the entire Bhutanese citizens. So did the public, who came out of their shops, to greet guests, unlike in other cities.

“They were charmed and enchanted by the welcome that showed on the faces of our smiling children,” Lyonchhoen said.

The heads of states, he said, were at ease in terms of safety and security because Bhutanese soldiers and police ensured complete safety and security in the region throughout the summit.

“To this end I know hundreds of soldiers and police went hungry and thirsty in the jungles surrounding the capital, highways and along the streets,” Lyonchhoen said.

You, Lyonchhoen said, referring to Bhutanese citizens he was conveying his message to, “have made the country and me proud and I know the royal families are proud of us.”

Source: Kuenselonline

Bhutan hosting its first ever SAARC summit

It has been a hectic week in the capital, with Bhutan hosting its first ever SAARC summit that ended yesterday.

But at the end of it all there is a deep sense of satisfaction with everyone involved that all went well if not perfectly.

This sense is not only shared by those, who were directly involved in some way with the summit, but also by their friends and family members in the capital and beyond, who were equally tense about how it might go.

Such a feeling grew from the fact that a lot of preparation work was still going on or seemed to be going on even at the last minute.

The unusual weather a few days before the summit threatened to rip apart decorative flags hung all over the city.

There were stories about rushed coordination meetings with no agenda, the interiors of recently completed SAARC villas still smelling of fresh paint and volunteers, who would serve and prepare some meals for the dignitaries, doing some last minute crash course.

Thus a sense of uncertainty as the day drew close. And when it came, everyone did the best they could, starting early and staying late into the night, so that visiting dignitaries were comfortable and felt at home.

Still then the summit was not devoid of its awkward moments. There were stories of hungry angry grumbling journalists, who were ushered into the summit hall hours in advance, but there was nothing to eat once inside.

There were also rumours about how the lights went off in one villa, and the water running out for some time in another and about a canine getting to one delegate. All these incidents unfortunately are true.

But the overall ambience of the summit prevailed, which was one of friendship, harmony and cooperation. The summit in itself went the way it has always been. The leaders gave their speeches and certain declarations were adopted, but a shared sense of destiny for the region did seem to emerge at the end of it.

The summit proceedings broadcast live on national television was watched with interest all across the country, like people normally do when watching an international soccer match.

Today Bhutanese know more about SAARC than they ever did and children can identify the flags of SAARC nations as well as their leaders.

And the country’s organisational capacity to host such summits has been through the litmus test. If it came through, it is because everyone, despite differences, came together as a team.

Now it is time to get back to serving the people and addressing issues, like alleviating poverty, one of SAARC’s founding goals.

Source: Kuenselonline

Mar 28, 2010

Lam Tshering, coffee with Indira Gandhi

As you drive by Paro airport’s runway, you might have passed by Lam Tshering tilling his paddy fields.

Nothing about the 59-year old sunburned farmer strikes one as exceptional. But ask him a little about his past – and it’s a bagful of surprises, including an incident involving having coffee with Indira Gandhi.

In 1969, Indira Gandhi hosted a gathering, says Lam Tshering, and he was on the guest list. How did he get to coffee with Indira Gandhi?

When Lam Tshering was 18, he was picked by the government, along with ten other boys from his village in Paro, to become mask dancers. These mask dancers eventually went on to journey around the world exhibiting Bhutanese culture in the ‘70s and ‘80s.

By the end of his dancing career, Lam Tshering had travelled to 17 countries, including Iran, at a time when only very few Bhutanese had the privilege to step outside the borders of Bhutan.

“It was a very hot place,” he says in Dzongkha on his visit to the middle eastern country. “And it was even hotter, because the only clothes we had were bura ghos.”

Today, Lam Tshering, who never had a formal education, is able to converse only in Dzongkha. On how he communicated with people, “We usually just smiled and looked at each other’s faces,” he says with a laugh.

He narrates an incident in Iran, where an Iranian came up to him and asked him what he was eating. “I had taken along some thingay (Chinese pepper) in my hemchu (gho pocket) for my gastric, which I would pop into my mouth occasionally,” he said. The Iranian man asked him for some. Lam Tshering pulled out a fistful of thingay to show the man. But to his astonishment, the man scooped the fistful into a palm and before he could stop him, gulped the thingay.

“I didn’t know how to tell him not to eat it, and that night I couldn’t sleep because I kept thinking that I’d killed him.” The Iranian man had become silent after eating the thingay and run out the room.

“Japan and Australia were the cleanest countries I’ve visited,” says Lam Tshering. “But Delhi was my favourite because I could speak some Hindi.”

Back to his coffee incident, he says that he was surprised that he was only offered plain coffee. “We waited and waited for the milk and sugar, because coffee or tea without milk and sugar in Bhutan was considered a poor man’s brew.” He explains that they were baffled they were being offered such a poor man’s drink, when the prime minister had just told us that she was honoured to have them at her residence as her first Bhutanese guests.

After a long wait, they realised they would not be getting any milk and sugar and, not to offend their hosts, gulped down their cold black coffees. “Only later did I realise there was something called black coffee,” he says with a snicker.

Would he want to travel like he once did? Lam Tshering says he is satisfied, especially that, as a poor uneducated villager from Paro, he was able to travel the world free of cost. “Today I’m too busy with my family and farm,” he says.

Source: Kuenselonline