Tibet trauma set Bhutan on long march to democracy
By Simon Denyer
THIMPU (Reuters) - When its big brother Tibet was invaded by China in 1950, the lesson was not lost on the rulers of the tiny hermit kingdom of Bhutan.
Isolation did not pay, and a gradual process of opening up and modernization culminated on Monday with the first parliamentary elections in the history of the last independent Himalayan kingdom.
Sandwiched by giant neighbors India and China, Bhutan had always felt very vulnerable, said Kinley Dorji, managing director of the state-owned Kuensel newspaper.
"Our strategy was to hide up in the mountains," he said. "That worked until 1960."
It was then, just a year after the Dalai Lama fled into exile, that Bhutan's third king, Jigme Dorji Wangchuck, opened the doors just a crack.
Shortly after the Chinese invasion, Wangchuck also began to gradually establish more democratic forms of governance.
Bhutan wanted to avoid what it saw as the mistake of Tibet -- having few diplomatic friends and shouldered with a feudal society that gave China the excuse to "liberate" it from serfdom.
Modernization was a process brought to fruition by Wangchuck's son and grandson, who forced the people of Bhutan on Monday to let the royalty stand aside and democracy take its place.
To head off the Chinese threat, the third king also developed close and friendly ties with India, whose soldiers help defend Bhutan's northern border and build its roads.
But modernization has been a slow and tightly controlled process. When the first jeep arrived in the capital Thimpu in the 1960s, locals ran in fear of the fire-breathing dragon. Others brought it water and cattle feed.
In 1971, Bhutan did what Tibet had never done, joined the United Nations.
A COUNTRY BESIEGED
The next big trauma and lesson for Bhutan's rulers came in 1975 when the Buddhist kings of Sikkim, Bhutan's little sister and even smaller western neighbor, were deposed and their country swallowed up by India.
Ethnic Nepalis, mainly Hindus, had been settled in Sikkim by the British in the nineteenth century and soon outnumbered the Buddhists. Apparently encouraged by India they rose up in the 1970s, won democracy and ousted the monarchy.
Bhutan learned its own lesson, clamping down on its own ethnic Nepali minority. Continued...



