Kathmandu: The Global Campaign for the Release of Political Prisoners in Bhutan (GCRPPB) has expressed serious concern about the forced deportation of ten Bhutanese refugees from the United States, leading to renewed statelessness and a humanitarian crisis. These individuals, originally evicted from Bhutan in the 1990s, had been legally resettled in the US under the UNHCR resettlement program. Despite this, they were forcibly removed and sent to Bhutan, arriving at Paro Airport on March 27, 2025.
“Rather than allowing them to remain, Bhutanese authorities expelled them to India, where they were left without any legal status or support,” GCRPPB said in a statement.
Indian security transferred them to the Nepal-India border at Panitanki. Three of them—Roshan Tamang, Asish Subedi, and Santosh Darji—were apprehended by Nepali authorities after reaching the Bhutanese refugee camp in Beldangi for ‘illegally’ entering Nepal without legal documents. “Their fate remains uncertain as they now face potential deportation back to India. The whereabouts of the remaining seven deportees remain unknown, raising serious concerns over their safety and well-being,” the statement said.
“This incident highlights a blatant violation of international refugee protections and the principle of non-refoulement. These former refugees, once victims of Bhutan’s ethnic cleansing policies, are now being retraumatized and rendered stateless once again.”
GCRPPB has strongly condemned the actions of the Bhutanese and Indian authorities, whose coordinated efforts have placed these individuals in an unprecedented legal limbo. “Their fundamental rights to asylum, protection, and legal status have been denied, exposing them to further risks of detention and abuse.”
Furthermore, GCRPPB has called upon the Government of Nepal to refrain from deporting these individuals back to Panitanki and urged Nepal to coordinate with the US and Indian embassies in Kathmandu and called on Bhutan to accept and resettle them. It has asked the Government of Bhutan to immediately accept them back, take responsibility for these individuals, grant them rightful legal status, and cease discriminatory actions against them. It has also asked the governments of India and Nepal to provide legal clarity, temporary humanitarian protection, and ensure access to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) for these individuals.
GCRPPB has demanded that the government of the United States should immediately halt the deportation of legally resettled Bhutanese refugees and allow them to face legal proceedings in the US if they have committed any crime or violated US laws. Moreover, the GCRPPB has asked the UNHCR and international human rights organizations to intervene immediately, investigate these violations, and provide urgent humanitarian assistance.
“GCRPPB has already contacted major international bodies such as the European Union, UN Human Rights Council, UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, Human Rights Watch, and other important institutions, seeking their immediate attention on this issue,” the statement issued by Ram Karki, Founder and Global Coordinator Global Campaign for the Release of Political Prisoners in Bhutan (GCRPPB), said. It has requested human rights and civil society leaders in Nepal to press the Nepali government to coordinate with the US and Indian embassies in Kathmandu to resolve this issue amicably and to prevent Bhutan from dumping its unwanted citizens in Nepal once and for all.
“Above all, we continue our unwavering advocacy for the safe and timely release of all Bhutanese political prisoners, striving for their rehabilitation and successful reintegration into society,” the statement reads.
Comment