An illustration of the Geluphu Mindfulness City from the Bhutan government’s promotional material on the project. Official narratives of the project on the Bhutan-India border emphasise harmony and prosperity, but overlook economic viability and the Lhotshampa expulsion from the region  IMAGO / Cover-Images
Podcast

Maximillian Morch on the disquiet behind Bhutan’s Geluphu Mindfulness City: State of Southasia #29

The writer discusses the project’s ambitions to revive Bhutan’s ailing economy and how it ignores the displacement of the Lhotshampa people from the Geluphu region

Bhutan’s bold new urban venture, the Geluphu Mindfulness City, is being pitched as a landmark in values-based development. Envisioned as an economic hub rooted in sustainability and Buddhist ideals, the project spans 2,500 square kilometres along the country’s southern border with India. But while official narratives emphasise harmony and prosperity, they overlook a critical historical context: Geluphu was once home to thousands of Lhotshampa – Nepali-speaking Bhutanese who were expelled from the country in the 1990s.

In this episode of State of Southasia, writer and researcher Maximilian Morch who studies Asia’s borderlands speaks to associate editor Nayantara Narayanan about the implications of the project. Morch says that the announcement project has been “incredibly painful” for displaced Lhotshampa communities, many of whom still hold land documents for plots now earmarked for development. “There are refugees alive today in Nepal who own the land that the GMC is being built on,” he says. “They have not been consulted. Their concerns are being bulldozed.”

He also questions the economic viability of the city, given Bhutan’s growing brain drain and struggling public services, noting that “special economic zones tend to have weaker worker rights and less employment protection.” Morch raises questions about who benefits from Bhutan’s development strategy, and who is being left out. 

Listen to the full episode on Spotify, Apple podcasts and YouTube

State of Southasia releases a new interview every two weeks.

Episode notes:

Maximilian Morch’s recommendations:

  • The dark shadows of Bhutan’s Gelephu ‘mindfulness city’ project (Scroll.in)

  • Susan Banki on the battles of Nepali-Bhutanese refugees: State of Southasia #16 (Himal Southasian podcast)

  • Unbecoming Citizens: Culture, Nationhood, and the Flight of Refugees from Bhutan - Michael Hutt (non-fiction)

Southasia and the Trump tariffs – Southasia Weekly #77

My “Namasudra Brahmin” family’s quest for caste dignity in Bangladesh

Saeed Mirza & Harsh Mander on the decades-long erosion of the idea of India

What is the Belt and Road Initiative really?

India’s deadly war on Naxalites and Adivasis – Southasia Weekly #76