Preparations are on in Bhutan for the coronation of Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck, who will ascend the throne on Thursday. The young royal taking the helm of the world's newest democracy will become the world's youngest reigning monarch.
THE CORONATION of Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck, a 28-year-old Oxford-educated bachelor will begin on Thursday morning (November 6) in the chamber of the Golden Throne at Thimpu, Bhutan . Wangchuck ,who will become the world?s youngest reigning monarch, caps an effort by the Bhutanese royals to survive by bringing in a fresh face and ending their absolute power over the Buddhist country.
With a charismatic and young royal taking the helm of the world?s newest democracy emerges into the modern world. Three of national celebration will follow, masked dances and offerings, which also marks 100 years of Bhutan?s monarchy. Wangchuck, who spent much of his formative years in America, Britain and India will receive the crown from his 52-year-old father, who modernised Bhutan during his 34-year reign, before bringing in democracy and abdicating the throne in 2006.
Inside Thimphu?s enormous white-walled Dzong or fortress, the Je Khenpo or chief abbot will chant sacred sutras empowering the fifth king with virtues like wisdom, compassion and vision. Bhutan have just over 600,000 people and wedged in remote hills and mountains between India and China, Bhutan held its first democratic elections for a new parliament and prime minister in March. The country?s former king had abdicated nearly two years ago as part of an effort to adapt and survive, something the king in nearby Nepal failed to do. His 240-year-old dynasty was abolished by former Maoist rebels in May. The country had no roads or currency until the 1960s and allowed television only in 1999. It also famously uses the principle of ?Gross National Happiness?, and not common economic indicators, to measure national well-being. Continuing to balance Bhutan?s exposure to the forces of globalisation will be the new king?s main challenge -- especially as many in the younger generation now have access to satellite television and the Internet. Many people are also confused over why the hugely popular former king decided to step down, and view the transition to democracy with trepidation. “We are happy about the celebrations, but there is a bit of sadness because the former king retired and we don?t know why,” said a Thimphu restaurant owner. Bhutan threw out 100,000 ethnic Nepalese in the early 1990s during a campaign to impose compulsory national dress and ban the Nepalese language. Many of the refugees went on to languish in camps in Nepal, which have seen the emergence of a Maoist rebel movement determined to wage war against the Wangchuk dynasty.
Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck, 28, is one of the youngest monarchs in the world.
But despite his relative youth, the Bhutanese king has not been thrown in at the deep end.
His father Jigme Singye Wangchuck - who himself acceded to the throne when aged only 16 - took great pains to ensure that Khesar was prepared to take over the throne before his abdication in December 2006.
The young king has a difficult act to follow. His father won international acclaim for his role in turning Bhutan into a constitutional monarchy while his emphasis on gross national happiness - the idea that spiritual and mental well-being are more important than material prosperity - made him the darling of development groups the world over.
The crown prince was educated in India and the US before attending Oxford University to read politics and international relations.
After graduating, the future monarch was encouraged by his father to travel abroad and represent his country of 600,000 people.
In a country where the monarchy remains revered - unlike in neighbouring Nepal - the future king has not had to try too hard to win over his people. That's because many are already staunch royalists and some openly wept when they heard news of King Jigme's plans to curb the powers of the monarchy.
Evidence of the reverence in which Bhutan's monarch is still held was clearly seen in June 2006 when the then crown prince represented his country in Thailand for King Bhumibol Adulyadej's 60th anniversary celebrations.
His boyish good looks not only created a stir among numerous Thai female fans but also won rave reviews in his home country, where his "diplomacy, charm and diplomatic finesse" was praised extensively in the press.
Jigme Khesar is the oldest son of Jigme Singye and his third wife, Queen Ashi Tshering Yangdon. He has a younger sister and brother as well as four half-sisters and three half-brothers by his father's other three wives - all of his father's wives are sisters. The new king is unmarried.
The young king began his reign without being officially crowned but was nevertheless confronted by a series of challenges that would have taxed the wisest of monarchs.
Prominent among them was overseeing the final stages of democratisation in his country before the elections of March 2008.
Like his father, the new king stressed that it was critically important that his country completed the process of becoming a constitutional monarchy despite the reluctance of many of his subjects to see any diminution of the monarch's powers.
He travelled extensively around the country encouraging people to take part in the vote - in which both main parties competed for power on similar manifestos, utterly loyal to their king.
"Even though in terms of governance we are now a democracy, there is no elected individual who will enjoy the kind of respect, trust, confidence and reverence our kings enjoy," Bhutan's first democratically elected Prime Minister, Jigmi Y Thinley, told Reuters in an interview.
Perhaps the most high-profile challenge for the newly-elected government is resolving once and for all with Nepal the future of thousands of ethnic Nepalese, who used to live in Bhutan but who were forced to take refuge in camps in Nepal more than a decade ago.
Their status is still in dispute even though many have with the help of international agencies emigrated to the US, Canada and Australia.
The new king will also be eager to ensure that his government does not upset Bhutan's larger neighbour, India, which is known to be concerned about what it says is the presence of Assamese rebels in the south of the kingdom.
King Khesar has already signed a new treaty of friendship with India in February 2007, replacing a 1949 treaty. Delhi retains a strong influence over Bhutan's foreign policy.
Above all the new king will be eager to ensure that the Bhutanese monarchy does not suffer the same fate as the royal family in Nepal.
The forward thinking of his father in scaling back the monarchy - and the popularity which has so been lavished on his son - make that an unlikely proposition.
The ceremony comprised an ancient and colourful ritual in a white-walled royal palace in the capital, Thimphu.Thousands of foreign dignitaries, including India's President, Pratibha Patil, governing Congress party leader Sonia Gandhi and Bollywood stars were present.
The guests were surrounded by lines of local people dressed in their national costumes.
The crown was bestowed on the new king by his father, Jigme Singye Wangchuck, 52, who stepped down in 2006 as part of his five-year plan to gradually introduce democracy to Bhutan's 600,000 citizens.
"I am happy, my friends are happy and in general as a nation we are happy," Sonam Phuntsho, a civil servant, told the AFP news agency.
"He [the new king] is reaching out to the people. He is very smart and decent man," he said.
Prime Minister Lyonchhen said earlier the coronation would further consolidate the country's "sovereign independence and security and promote further unity, harmony, and peace in the kingdom".
But correspondents say that while 2008 will be remembered as the year democracy was introduced to Bhutan, revolutionary change is not on the agenda.
The transition to democracy has been deliberately designed to be slow and steady and the monarchy will continue to play a central role in Bhutanese life.
Both the new government and the opposition say they are committed to the royal philosophy of Gross National Happiness - or GNH - which aims to strike a better balance between the spiritual and the material.