PR Dahal holds a tattered photograph in his hand. It is
a picture of a house - his house, where he and his family
used to live in southern Bhutan.
He shows it to people who come to his current home, a
bamboo hut at the Timai refugee camp in south-east Nepal.
"Look at what we
had," he says, gesturing at the photo of a ochre-coloured
concrete bungalow with a distinctive pagoda roof.
"We left that behind for this place, no power, no
water and plenty of mosquitoes."
PR Dahal is one of around 100,000 people living in
refugee camps in eastern Nepal.
It's been nearly 10 years since the first wave of Nepali
speaking migrants fled, or left, southern Bhutan - 10 years
that have seen no progress towards a resolution of their
plight.

Conditions in the camp are far from ideal
|
The Princess Royal will
visit the refugee camps on the 28 November as part of a five
day trip to Nepal.
PR Dahal isn't alone is hoping that her presence can
somehow restart momentum towards a solution to one of the
world's least known refugee crises.
Identity questioned
Bhutan says many of the people in the camps in Nepal
aren't legitimate Bhutanese citizens.
Some are criminals maintain officials in Thimpu, others
are economic migrants from poor parts of Nepal who settled
illegally in Bhutan.
"Nonsense," says Mr Dahal, whose family went to
Bhutan early in the 20th century and who served as a
government official and national assembly member before he
left in 1990.
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Starting the day with the Bhutanese
anthem
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"They forced us to
leave. One day I saw the king and told him about injustices
towards my people, the Nepali-speakers, in southern Bhutan,
the next I was picked up and dumped on the border with India
and forced to leave."
Whatever the truth of the situation, a visit to the camps
shows that something must be done to move the situation
along, somehow.
At morning assembly at Timai's main high school, 3,000
students sing the Bhutanese national anthem to start their
day.

The men are unemployed and frustrated
|
Nineteen-year-old Dili Ram
Adikhari will graduate this year from Year 10, but there is
little or no prospect that he can ever put that education to
use in Nepal, at least legally.
"We can't take jobs outside the camps," he
says, "So I want to work for the aid agencies to help
my people.
"But most importantly, I want to go home. I was 10
when I came here. I have many good memories of Bhutan."
Violence
In another camp about an hours drive away, young women
sit on the ground, adding up numbers with calculators.
They're looking into the link between domestic violence
and the sheer hopelessness felt by many male refugees -
unemployed and with easy access to alcohol.

The sense of despair is powerful

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Western aid worker
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Meena Karki of the British
charity Oxfam is supervising the study.
"We don't know yet what the exact numbers are but
when you talk to women, you realise the problem is
acute."
The outgoing UN High Commissioner for Refugees, Sadako
Ogata, visited the camps last May and later said she hoped a
solution might emerge within a month.

What does the future hold for her?
|
Far more time than that has
gone by and talks between Bhutan and Nepal on ways to
repatriate at least some refugees have stalled.
"Hope soared after her visit," said a western
aid agency official who works in the camps.
"It was an unreasonable hope because she was clearly
talking about the best case scenario.
"That hasn't happened and now the sense of despair
is powerful."
Diplomats in Kathmandu watch the refugee situation
closely and hope the Nepali and Bhutanese Governments can
resume talking soon.
But as one official put it, "this situation is
falling off the radar screen and the fear is that something
dramatic, something ugly, may have to happen to get it back
in view."
