Food Assistance to Refugees from Bhutan in Nepal
Operation ID: 200787
As a consequence of revised citizenship laws enacted by the Government of Bhutan in the 1980s, Bhutanese asylum seekers fled to Nepal in the early 1990s. The Bhutanese refugees are the decedents of Nepalese people that migrated to Bhutan between the 1870s and 1940s. In 1985, after the renouncement of earlier citizenship laws granted to this group of people, they were forced to leave Bhutan.
In 1993, the governments of Nepal and Bhutan initiated
negotiations to find solutions for the Bhutanese
refugees living in Nepal. Finally in 2007, the
Government of Nepal
agreed to third-country resettlement as a durable
solution. As of August 2014, over 92,000 refugees have
been resettled to eight countries, while some 23,500
people are
still in in two camps in Jhapa and Morang districts
located in the eastern plains region of Nepal. According
to the latest resettlement trends, it is expected that
each year 20%
of the remaining refugees will resettle, and a final
caseload of 10,000-15,000 will remain once the
resettlement exercise concludes.
Since 1992, WFP has provided food assistance under a
series of emergency and protracted relief operations at
the request of the Government of Nepal. As refugees
are
not permitted to participate in viable agriculture or
economic activities, they have been dependent on
external assistance as their primary source of food
since then.
The overall goal of this protracted relief and recovery
operation (PRRO) is to save lives and protect
livelihoods of the refugee population by providing
secure access to
food, improving the nutritional status of refugees and
enabling them to acquire skills that will improve
self-reliance. The PRRO will contribute to WFP’s
Strategic Objective (SO) 1 and Millennium Development
Goal 1, and is in line with the Zero Hunger Challenge.
Following recommendations from the 2014 JAM and the
market surveys of 2012 and 2014, WFP will continue to
provide full food rations to the refugees while
monitoring
the market prices with the intention of switching to a
market-based response from the third year of operation,
when the refugee population will stabilize. Furthermore,
in
order to stabilize or reduce undernutrition, children
aged 6-59 months, pregnant and lactating women (PLW),
people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA) and tuberculosis
(TB) clients will receive additional nutrition support.
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Resource Situation |
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