Bhutan News Service Explained

Bhutan News Service (BNS)
Foundation:2004
Location:Kathmandu, Nepal
Products:online news services
Homepage:bhutannewsservice.com

Bhutan News Service (BNS) is an independent news agency run by Bhutanese refugee journalists since 2004 from Kathmandu, the capital city of Nepal.[1] It is solely operated by refugees who were mostly born or brought up in refugee camps and without previous media experience.

When over 100,000 of Bhutanese refugees started taking shelter in UN-administered refugee camps of Jhapa and Morang districts in eastern part of Nepal, they felt the need for vocal media in the refugee community. Several failed attempts were made before the advent of the Bhutan News Service.[2]

The Bhutan News Service was founded in 2004 by a small group of Bhutanese refugee youth It emerged in as an alternative to traditional forms of media publications. Initially, the works were limited to simply blogging. From 2006, BNS went online through its own news portal.[3]

Currently, around two dozen reporters and over half a dozen of editors from various countries contribute for the news service on voluntary basis. The news agency has not been legally registered since Nepalese laws do not entertain registration of any entity owned and run by foreign nationals in Nepalese soil.[4]

According to former Indian diplomat Phunchok Stobdan, the regular Bhutanese media avoids reporting on Chinese border incursions and other strategic matters, so that the Bhutan News Service and other such exile media are the only sources available for reliable information.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 23 January 2009 . About Us | Bhutan News Service .
  2. Web site: Annual Press Freedom Report of Bhutan 2007-2008 . APFA-Bhutan . May 2009.
  3. Web site: Home . bhutannewsservice.com.
  4. Web site: 2012-10-03. FAQs Bhutan News Service. 2021-01-02. en-US.
  5. P. Stobdan, In the Tri-Junction Entanglement, What Does Bhutan Want?, The Wire, 11 July 2017.