(RNS) Officials in Buddhist-majority Bhutan have barred Hindu and
Buddhist clergy from voting in upcoming elections in order to keep a
clear distinction between religion and politics.
The landlocked
Himalayan nation considers Mahayana Buddhism the state religion and
funds a large monastic community, but also requires religion to be above
politics.
The country's regulatory authority on religious
organizations is now busy identifying Buddhist and Hindu clergy who
should be barred from voting.
Phurpa Dorji, the senior
coordinator for the eight-member chhoedey lhentshog regulatory body,
said the list of religious figures who should be above politics was yet
to be finalized. The members have met four times since April 2009, and
more meetings are being planned.
Dorji said the ban existed in
Bhutan's first democratic elections two years ago, but there was
ambiguity at the time on who could vote and who could not.
The
Bhutan Youth Development Fund, a non-profit group that sponsors monks
who do not receive government assistance, estimates that almost 10
percent of the population is part of the monastic system.
Around
75 percent of the less than 700,000 Bhutanese are Buddhist. Another 22
percent are Hindus, the only other officially recognized religion.
Since
the 17th century, Bhutan has followed a dual system of governance,
known as the Chhoe-sid-nyi, which splits the government powers into a
religious branch headed by a chief abbot (known as Je Khenpo), and an
administrative branch headed by the king (now headed by the prime
minister).
Until now, the clergy had the right to vote. The
Chhoe-sid-nyi is "unified in the person of" and upheld by the sacrosanct
but impeachable king, who has to be a Buddhist, according to the 2008
constitution.
The constitution also mandates that parliament
conclude all sessions with Buddhist prayers, and requires religious
institutions and figures to promote the Buddhist spiritual heritage
"while also ensuring that religion remains separate from politics in
Bhutan."
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