Television and Bhutanese authorities

Television reached the tiny Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan only eight years ago but the country is hooked.

Hollywood movies and Indian soaps are the biggest draw, but amid a mass of programmes there is growing unease about the cost to traditional culture.

Residents of the tiny nation, wedged high in the mountains between India and China, were given their first taste of television in 1999 following widespread discontent over missing the football World Cup the previous year.

Now 40 channels are on offer, beaming images of an outside world that Bhutan’s rulers spent centuries trying to keep out. Family life is changing.

“When I had no TV, we used to get together and sometimes the kids would sing and chat. The kids also used to go out and then I could concentrate on prayers,” said Ngyenam, a middle-aged woman who lives in a village outside the capital Thimphu.

The goggle box has also transformed the tiny village of Yuwakha. Villagers no longer talk and drink well into the night; as dusk falls the streets are deserted as people settle down for soap operas from India.

“After we got the TV, I hardly get time,” said Ngyenam. “Even though I spin my prayer wheel, my mind is always on the TV. I can go anywhere… watching TV is like travelling to all the places I like.”

Ngyenam’s husband, a retired civil servant, believes their children’s concentration is also beginning to suffer.

“They get frustrated when we say ‘don’t watch’. So it is a concern for us because they don’t study properly,” Sangay Tshering said.

A changing lifestyle in Yuwakha is one of many examples of the impact of television in Bhutan, something that the authorities are starting to fret over.

But what many fear is the rabid consumerism of much of the outside world. “Television and advertisements create desires,” said Phuntsho Rapten, a researcher with the Centre for Bhutan Studies. “And it is also possible that these kind of desires may not be satisfied given the economic situation of the people.”

[Source]


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2 Responses to 'Television and Bhutanese authorities'

  1. kentsho - June 27th, 2007 at 6:28 am

    Watching TV or having a TV set in ones house is not anyway a factor which contributes to ones lifestyle an living. Its a media and we are exposed to the outside world which some of us have never heard of or seen in life. Blame oneself and let TV channels be on air………

  2. Via_Email - July 26th, 2007 at 4:04 am

    sir/madam
    with the times of development in bhutan,more curruptions are taking place over the dzongkhag.on this issue i would like to state that on 14/07 /2007 in paro dzongkhag,outside shari club bonday an underage boy boy was beaten up severly by a gang and was about to throw in the running river of paro in an uncouncious state with an intension to kill that innocent boy.but he was lucky that at that right movement, he was saved from the riverside by the police officials who arrived on time and was on their duty.we believe that the boy is still hospitalized and under treatment fighting for his life.where as from the gang members only few of them are arrested but the rest of them are still scotfree n unknown.so in this matter it would benifit the public,if the police officials could look to the matter seriously and arrest the rest of the gang members.otherwise it would encourage them(gangs)later if actions are not taken seriously according to the law of the land,or else who is going to garruntee that this kind of situation will not arrise later, with an innocent person and hamper his/her life which would drag him/her behind the bars just because of gangs uprising.
    this is an imformation for the public welfares stating that we dont want any innocent people to get innovoled and dragged by these kind of gangs and groupisium.


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