4/22/09

Bhutanese refugee leader gunned down in Nepal camp

News post: >>> http://vermont-bhutanese-association.blogspot.com/


Bhutanese refugee leader gunned down in Nepal camp

(click here for the source link) >>> Kathmandu, April 22 (IANS)

A 52-year-old Bhutanese man living in a refugee camp in eastern Nepal was gunned down Tuesday, police said.

Shantiram Nepal, a 52-year-old, was killed by a group of people who attacked him at his hut in eastern Nepal’s Beldangi camp.

Five people have been arrested on the suspicion that they were behind the killing.

Nepal was said to have been a member of the underground Communist Party of Bhutan (Maoist) that says it will start an armed struggle in the Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan to overthrow its hereditary monarchy.

The 52-year-old is said to have left the party recently.

More than 100,000 Bhutanese have been living in refugee camps in east Nepal since their eviction by the Druk government almost two decades ago.

After hopes of repatriation failed, many of the refugees have opted for settlement in western countries.

Led by the US, other governments like Canada, Norway and Australia have offered to provide a new home to the refugees.

The exodus however created tension between those who want a fresh start and those who want the world community to pressure Bhutan into taking its citizens back.

The Bhutan Maoists are opposing the resettlement in other countries.

Nepal’s ruling Maoist party said it would resume repatriation talks with the Bhutan government but so far, has made no progress.

Many Maoist leaders blame India, Bhutan’s largest donor and trade partner, for the impasse, saying India’s support has emboldened the Druk government into refusing to take the refugees back.

The Syracuse, New York Bhutanese Community Struggles to Find Jobs

Economic recession makes life harder for refugees

Posted by Maureen Sieh /The Post-Standard , Syracuse, New York, April 20, 2009 5:51A




Photo by Mike Greenlar
Bhutanese refugees Chali Wagle 19, her father, Karna Wagle (right) and neighbor Gopi Neopane (left), meet with Jasenko Mondom, a job developer at the Refugee Assistance Program on Park Street. in Syracuse. Everyone laughed when Mondom asked if Karna was strong and healthy enough for a construction job. Karna responded that he had done that kind of work before in Nepal.

Syracuse, NY.-----Read my story in Monday's Post-Standard about how the economic recession is affecting refugees. Many of the nearly 1,000 refugees who settled in the Syracuse area in the last year are having a tough time finding work.

Jasenko Mondom, a job developer at the Syracuse school district's Refugee Family program on Park Street, remembers when employers used to call him every day looking for refugees to fill entry-level positions at local factories. These days those jobs are hard to come by because factories are closing, reducing hours and laying off workers, he said.

Refugee resettlement agencies receive funding from the federal government that requires them to put refugees to work within the first four months of their arrival. But Jasenko and others say they're having a hard time meeting that deadline because of the economy. Refugee resettlement agencies nationwide are experiencing the same problem.

With the loss of manufacturing jobs, refugee agencies are looking at other areas of the economy-seasonal agricultural jobs, retail health care and house-keeping as well as enrolling refugees in job-training programs.

"We're looking at any kind of market outside the factories that we've gone to,'' said Felicia Castricone, executive director of Northside CYO, the Catholic Charities agency that runs the refugee program.

Last year, Catholic Charities of Onondaga County placed more than 50 refugees at Plainville Turkey Farms, now known as Kosher Valley. When the company changed management, 57 refugees were laid off, said Harvey Pinyoun, a caseworker and volunteer coordinator. Nine of those workers were called back, he said. The agency also placed workers at Beak & Skiff, an apple orchard in Lafayette.



Photo by Mike Greenlar /The Post-Standard

Catholic Charities Refugee Resettlement Services caseworker Harvey Pinyoun(left)assists Burundi refugee Jean Baptiste in finding employment, at CYO on North Salina St. He was recently laid off from the former Plainville Turkey Farms, now Kosher Valley.

The Refugee Family Program has enrolled Bhutanese refugees in certified nursing assistant programs at James Square Nursing Home and Iroquis Nursing Home, Jasenko said. Some refugees are also enrolled in the Northside Green Train, a new initiative developed by the Northside Collaborative to offer basic construction and weatherization training for neighborhood residents.

Assemblyman Bill Magnarelli secured funding for the 12-week program, which seeks to help residents find jobs, said Dominic Robinson, the collaborative's program director. Thirteen of the 15 participants are refugees, he said.

"We're working with refugees because clearly there's huge population on the North Side,'' he said. "About 300 families a year come to our neighborhood through the refugee resettlement agencies. We wanted to target them initially just because we have good relationship with the agencies, and it's an easy pipeline.''

Refugee resettlement agencies are also working with refugees who have been laid off from jobs they've had for years. Refugees are competing with American workers for the limited number of jobs that anybody will be eager to take in this economy.

Some refugees moved here from other states, hoping to find work, but found the same challenges. The lines are long at all three refugee agencies. Most people come looking for job leads or need help filing for unemployment benefits and other social services.
"People who are used to working, they don't want to be on the dole,'' said Matt Centore, a job developer at the refugee center on Park Street.

Chali Wagle, 19, a refugee from Bhutan, showed up at the center on a recent Monday with her father, Karna, 43 and their neighbor, Gopi Neopane, 40.

Gopi was a seamstress in Nepal. She made clothes and sold them in the market. She's hoping to find work using her sewing skills. Karna has some experience in construction. He went to several construction sites where other Bhutanese refugees worked, but no one was hiring, he said.
Chali said her parents have been looking for work since they settled here in September. She finished 10th grade in Nepal, but Chali said she wants to find a job.

"I'm looking for any sort of job I can do,'' she said. "I feel bad I can't find work.''
After fleeing civil war, economic and social injustices in their homelands, most refugees are eager to find jobs so they can take care of their families and pursue the American dream. While they are safe and free, refugees are concerned about their financial future.Jean Baptiste, 35, a refugee from Congo, lost his job at Marquardt Corporation in Cazenovia in December. He's been looking for a job since then because it's hard to support his wife, Maria and their 6-year-old daughter, Agnes on the $180 he receives every week from unemployment."I can't pay all the bills," he said. "It's too difficult to find any job because too many companies, no work. If you not work, it's not a good feeling. It's too bad."

Jean story was echoed by the dozens of refugees I interviewed for this story. During a recent visit to Catholic Charities' refugee center on North Salina Street, I found six Bhutanese refugees using the computers in the job development office to fill out online applications for housekeeping and food service positions at St. Joseph Hospital Health Center. Five of the six refugees have bachelor's degrees, but they'll take any job.

photo by Mike Greenlar /The Post-Standard
Catholic Charities Refugee Resettlement Services caseworker John Miller Jr. lower left, works on his computer at CYO on N. Salina St., with an office full of college educated Bhutanese refugees, looking for local employment. Front L to R Prakash Kharel and Kumari Pokhrel, back standing Megh Powdyal, sitting Bhim Basnet. The three men have college degrees in Nepal, Kumari did not finish her degree. Miller specializes in refugee employment.

Prakash Kharel, 28, was one of them. Prakash settled in Syracuse two months ago with his wife and their two children, ages 4 and 8. "I'm just looking for any kind of entry-level job,'' he said. "I just want to get a job now.''

John Miller, a FrancisCorps volunteer at the refugee program, has been helping refugees find work. He helps them fill out applications, takes them on interviews and talks to employers. Some refugees, he said, have found jobs on their home at local hotels and retail stores. John is leaving in August to start medical school, but he's concerned about the refugees. The job market is challenging, but the refugees need a lot of support because of what they've been through to get to America, he said."We are a nation of immigrants,'' he said.

4/13/09

Reporter's Diary - One Year in the USA




This is an excerpt from a news article posted today on 13 April 2009 by the editor of the Association of Press Freedom Activists (APFA) – Bhutan. It is an organization in exile established to work for a freedom of press and freedom of speech and expression in Bhutan.

The article was published on April 13, 2009. Here is the link to the entire article: http://www.apfanews.com/opinion/reporter%e2%80%99s-diary-one-year-in-the-usa/

Reporter's Diary - One Year in the USA
By Kazi Gautam

When I reached office of the Catholic Youth Organization (CYO), a wing of US CCB, one of the receiving agencies in Syracuse, New York (where I now live), I was thrilled to see the hall full of people. I mean the resettled Bhutanese.
There was a meeting to plan for establishing a community center. The Bhutanese community in Syracuse has been planning for a community center to carry out their own activities.
They wish to organize their own ESL classes, have Bhutanese Community meetings bi weekly to welcome the new arrivals, plan for the future programs, explore the ways to preserve cultural identity, and perform and plan for religious, social and cultural activities. These are just some of the things to be carried out in the Bhutanese community center.

It takes me by surprise when I think that I have passed eleven months in Syracuse after getting resettled here. There was the time when one could only see a few resettled Bhutanese in the area. However, the story has a different aspect after 11 months when Syracuse alone has over 300 Bhutanese - about the same number as Vermont. Syracuse is a city of more than 200,000 citizens. It is located about 5 hours from Burlington, Vermont.
When Hari Bangaley, my case manager received my wife and me in the airport, I felt the warmth of the Nepali heart and his smile and greeting erased my tiredness then. However, these days the new comers are greeted by not less that five people. The Syracuse streets are usually covered by the Bhutanese people. Some are found walking to the groceries and some are walking to hospitals. Many of them are encountered on their ways to ESL classes. Some are seen walking to the Madina Halal, one of the three places where a goat meat is sold.

A gathering of Bhutanese. Photo: Kazi Gautam/APFAnews

These days I see many people have been struggling to get employed. The educated people fill application online and visit employers in person while others have to rely on their job developers. Incredibly true, around twenty Bhutanese got employed in March which has eased the pain of both the exiled Bhutanese and the receiving agencies. I still remember those days ........................... Click here to read the remainder of this article >>> http://www.apfanews.com/opinion/reporter%E2%80%99s-diary-one-year-in-the-usa/


4/12/09

Bhutanese Refugee Empowerment Project

New Information, Please Click Here: >> http://vermont-bhutanese-association.blogspot.com/



(The following article has been published by SEWA International)



How are our "resettled" brothers and sisters from Bhutan and the Nepal refugee camps surviving? Please read this story below. There are already two SEWA Bhutanese Empowerment Projects operating in our small neighboring state of New Hampshire - and three next door in Massachusetts!





Bhutanese Refugee Empowerment Project


http://www.sewausa.org/bhutanese-refugee-empowerment-project



Sewa International USA provides a helping hand to Bhutanese refugees


The population in Bhutan mainly consists of two communities: the Drukpas and the Lhotshampas. In 1985, conflict between these two communities resulted in a mass exodus of Lhotshampas to Nepal. Starting from then until 1994, more than 110,000 Lhotshampas took refuge in seven UN-administered camps in Nepal living in very poor conditions.


The United States eventually volunteered to resettle 60,000 of these refugees, with the remainder destined to go to other developed nations. In 2008, they began arriving in the United States in what the UN has described as one of the world's largest resettlement efforts ever.



These refugees are given only a few months of support from the government and the resettlement agencies. After that, they are required to become self-sufficient. The most pressing needs are for financial assistance, employment, and basic material needs. They also require support to help them make the transition to this new land.


These are poor families who cannot afford to buy essentials such as blankets, winter jackets, and toys for their children. Many have no jobs or are students and have no income. Although the VolAgs (Voluntary Agencies), or resettlement agencies, provide some support for the first few months, it is not adequate.


Though many of the refugees are educated and can speak English, many of them have remained unemployed. And because agency support and government aid is not available to them for an extended period of time, the assistance of Sewa International is quickly becoming a lifeline for many of these families.

Sewa International USA is providing:

Sewa International USA has taken up a nationwide project to help these families. Currently, our chapters in various cities, along with various local organizations, are working to fulfill the immediate and longer-term needs of these refugees with several more chapters gearing up to help.



Sewa International USA is providing:


  • Financial help

  • Essential materials such as blankets, winter jackets, clothes, toys etc.

  • Employment assistance

  • Job search assistance

  • Sponsorship of vocational training

  • Job fairs

  • Mobility

  • Help in acquiring driver licences

  • Sponsoring or donating used cars

  • Help in transitioning to a new environment while preserving their culture

  • Help in conducting cultural events

  • Mentoring and friendship

  • Rides to their preferred places of worship

Each chapter may only provide certain services depending upon availability of resources. We welcome any Bhutanese refugees who need help to contact us at the information provided below.
Locations:
Sewa International USA is currently conducting the BRE project at the following locations.








Contact:
Email: info@sewausa.org


Phone: 510-579-4742


How can you help?

We appeal to our benefactors to donate towards this project. We also appeal to the community and its organizations to provide a helping hand.


Supporting Organizations:
Hindu Swayamsevak Sangh
Hindu Temple of Atlanta
India Association of New Hampshire
Sunnyvale Hindu Temple
Vishwa Hindu Parishad

4/9/09

Please attend the Bhutanese Community meeting (tomorrow) on Saturday, April 11 at the Burlington Library at 1:00 pm

CLICK HERE>>> http://vermont-bhutanese-association.blogspot.com/






Namasté !

Attention! Here is the news and an announcement of the first Bhutanese Community Meeting!


Saturday (tomorrow)
April 11
1 to 3 p.m.
Fletcher Free Library
235 College Street
Burlington


Dear family friends and well wishers,

We are pleased to invite you to the first informal Bhutanese community meeting scheduled to be held on Saturday, the 11th of April, 2009. The meeting commences at 1:00 pm and ends at 3:00 pm at the Fletcher Free Library, 2nd floor. This gathering is initiated by some willing-to-help local friends as we build a strong Bhutanese community here in northern Vermont. Invited are family friends of Bhutanese families (volunteers), representatives from each Bhutanese refugee family, and well wishers to our Bhutanese community. May we have the pleasure of your company at this meeting as we work together to build a vital Bhutanese community? Your presence is highly solicited.

Many Thanks - Madhu and Harka


Dhanyabaad

4/5/09

Need help with your landlord situation, or do you have questions about renting rules and laws?

Another posting at the Vermont Bhutanese Association forum website: CLICK HERE

http://vermont-bhutanese-association.blogspot.com/




“Judge orders state to enforce housing rules,” By Wilson Ring, The Associated Press August 29, 2008,


This posting is from a Burlington Free Press newspaper article by Wilson Ring, of The Associated Press, dated August 29, 2008.

The formatting and link to this article was provided via a link to the: Vermont Tenants, Inc. website.

The Vermont Tenants, Inc. office is located at 294 North Winooski Avenue in Burlington, Vermont, (nearby the Food Shelf office).

Vermont Tenants, Inc. provides free direct services to tenants including advice, advocacy and referrals and they conduct workshops for various groups on residential rental housing laws, codes and more. Most of Vermont Tenants, Inc. services are provided by phone, but walk-in clients can usually be assisted during normal business hours.

They produce and distribute the widely used handbook, "Renting in Vermont, Handbook. " This handbook provides information about Vermont's Landlord-Tenant laws. Please stop by the Vermont Tenants, Inc. office (at 294 North Winooski Avenue in Burlington) and ask for a copy of the "Renting in Vermont, Handbook".

They will be happy to give you fair and friendly advice regarding any question you have about renting an apartment or questions you may have regarding how your landlord treats you or your renting situation.