The cost of promoting Dzongkha

December 11, 2009: From this issue, Bhutan Observer’s Dzongkha edition, Druk Nelug, is going smaller drastically and significantly. The award-winning Dzongkha newspaper is becoming poorer by four pages, down from 10 pages. However regrettable and painful it is, three-and-a-half-year-old financial reasons have questioned its very survival and compelled us to take this drastic measure.

In the last three and a half years, Bhutan Observer has spent more than Nu 7.09 million on the publication of its Dzongkha edition while it has hardly generated Nu 1.2 million in return. This means, only about 17 percent of the cost has been recovered.

In Druk Nelug’s first nine months, when it recruited as many as 15 translators, only four advertisement materials were provided solely for publication in Dzongkha. It was the period during which Bhutan Observer spent more than Nu one million for a return of Nu 100,000.

This is all because, despite dismally poor readership and total lack of advertisement revenue, the government policy requires every newspaper to publish its Dzongkha edition mandatorily.

While we wholeheartedly acknowledge the policy that seeks to promote our national language, putting a fledgling newspaper to a survival test through an imposition is anything but reasonable.

As much as the media are socially responsible agencies, they are also commercial entities. Bhutan Observer has, on its own or with other newspapers, repeatedly appealed to the government in numerous fora to support its Dzongkha edition. Every time, the government has acknowledged our appeal and assured its support, both verbally and in black and white.

Druk Nelug’s suspension after nine months of financially crippling operation provoked strong reactions from the government. With the threat of revoking licence if the publication was not resumed, the government assured that it was ‘taking stock of all the problems and issues faced by the private newspapers and investigating ways and means to address them.’ That was in March 2007. Since then, many appeals and assurances have been exchanged, but to no avail.

We are reducing Druk Nelug to four pages as an interim measure. We will continue to be a separate publication – not an insert – and maintain its standard and credibility that we have painstakingly built over the years. The day the government gives meaning to its assurances, we will bring back Druk Nelug to its present form and improve upon it.

Until then, we will keep stressing that our Dzongkha edition is unsustainable. Period.

(Editorial, Bhutan Observer)

1 thought on “The cost of promoting Dzongkha”

  1. Thanks a lot to Bhutan Observer for trying best to keep its Dzongkha edition (National Language) “Druk Nelug” in large lost. As a Bhutanese you are contributing a lot to National Language; even you had appealled to the RGoB for financial support for continuing in it’s previous publication of ten pages but in vain.
    I think this is what the Lokshampa people had faced in 1990 democratic movement , arose voices but goverment surppressed down the movement by deploying RBA,RBP in southern districts.
    It shows that you are kin in protecting and promoting the National language but the RGoB turned ears to other side, and you were compelled to minimize its size because of it’s readers; what a hell is it? even in a nation, national language newspaper has to be minimized in size or stop its publication as there are no readers.
    From this what I want to conclude is that, there are many powerful persons in high level post or in parliment those who want to create misunderstanding between the innocent people and the king. Other wise, how a king wants his 23 percentage of people to suffer in other countries and can’t provide financial support to promote and protect National Language.
    Bhutan Observer friends, this might be your first revolution against the autocratic goverment, the goverment who can’t want to protect and promote National language. I hope to hear you and read, movement against the goverment to protect and promote national language and persons those are suppressing us
    must be suppressed by the innocent people of Bhutan.

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