By Harriet Grant

BBC World Service in Nepal



The refugees arrived in Nepal after being stripped of their nationality (Pic: Jasleen Sethi)

The refugees are ethnic Nepalese forced out of Bhutan in the 1990s by the government, which was concerned with the rising influence of a sizeable Hindu minority in the Buddhist country.

Bhutan and Nepal have been at loggerheads ever since over how to solve the problem. The refugees have now been presented with the option of resettlement abroad - with 60,000 being given the opportunity to live in the US.

But this has caused divisions among the refugees, with supporters of the move threatened with intimidation and violence.

Mahindra - not his real name - told BBC World Service's The World Today programme how a mob of 40 people came to his hut armed with knives, calling him an American agent.

"My mum was dragged to the ground; my clothes were torn, ripped up with knives," he said.

"They did this because I support resettlement to America."

Slave rumours

Mahindra added that he was himself only 11 years old when he was forced to leave Bhutan; now he has a nine-year-old child.

Some of the refugees need care for diseases such as goitre (Pic: Jasleen Sethi)

"So I say, let refugees decide their own fate and destiny."

Mahindra is based at Beldangi Refugee Camp, home to some 20,000 refugees. There, the children sing about returning to a motherland they have never seen - Bhutan.

And many feel it will spell the death of their dream to return home if the refugees accept a move abroad.

As a result, a number of rumours are spread - that the flights out are to various extents a trick, with some people believing they will be used as slave labour on arrival in the US.

Reports back

Tek Nath Rijal, the self-appointed leader of the Bhutanese refugees, is an outspoken critic of resettlement.

The refugees have survived entirely on international aid for 17 years (Pic: Jasleen Sethi)

He argued instead that he believes those being attacked are Bhutanese agents, working on behalf of the government to persuade people to resettle - meaning that Bhutan would not have to take them back.

"Instead of pressurising the Bhutan government, they are helping them," he added.

But in the camp, refugees simply feel confused, with the undecided facing more threats. A man was shot in the latest violence.

As the first of them settle in America, their reports back will determine the likely future of those they leave behind.