By Sushil Sharma in Kathmandu
Nepal and Bhutan have agreed on how to decide whether refugees from Bhutan
living in eastern Nepal for the last ten years have the right to return to
Bhutan.
Following a three-day meeting between Nepalese Foreign Minister Chakra
Prasad Bastola, and his Bhutanese counterpart Jigmi Thinley, the two countries
have agreed to set up a joint team to verify which of the refugees have
Bhutanese nationality.
The agreement is being seen as an important breakthrough in resolving the
long-standing dispute over the repatriation of the refugees.
Several rounds of such talks in the past had failed due to differences over
verification methods.
Verification
Nepalese foreign ministry spokesman, Gyan Chandra
Acharya, told the BBC
that the team leaders would visit the camps in eastern Nepal to begin the
verification of the refugees nationality by the end of next month.

Verification of the refugees will start in January
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One hundred thousand ethnic Nepalese refugees
who say they are Bhutanese have been living in camps in Nepal for the last ten
years following their alleged eviction by the Bhutanese government.
Nepal says that all refugees are Bhutanese nationals, and that Bhutan should
allow them to return to home.
Bhutan is prepared to take back only a few thousand who it says are genuine
Bhutanese nationals.
Nepalese vindicated
Nepal wanted to verify the nationality of the refugees on the basis of the
head of the refugee family. Bhutan favoured the verification of individual
refugee.
That the two countries have now agreed to start the process on the basis of
the family is widely seen as the vindication of the Nepalese position.
The agreement is an important breakthrough in the bilateral talks on
resolving the long-standing dispute between the two countries.
However, analysts say the total resolution of the problem is still a long way
off, as verification will take a long time to be completed.