One afternoon, a week ago,
I was journeying back home from Paro. It was in a taxi; a 45-minute drive to
Thimphu. We were five altogether - four passengers, and the cabbie.
A passenger, staying in the
front seat, offered doma to the
cabbie. The young cabbie accepted it, took a khamto. The smell of doma
immediately gushed in the car giving me a feeling of nasty nausea.
She turned back and offered
it to me. Such an attractive woman to decline her offer, by the way; but I
shook my head. Two other passengers sitting on my left and right declined
too.
I never take doma, just to
let you know. And I still remember warning a girl, “I will never kiss you if
you take doma.”
A phone rang. Everybody
checked their phones - that’s the thing when we keep common ringtone. The
cabbie received it, it’s his. The call got disconnected in the middle of conversation.
“Aw…this is the problem with
the B-mobile service,” he tsked his tongue and grumbled.
He dialed his call; the
service was unavailable. Frustrated, he added, “The government deducts five
percent tax. And see, this is what we get.”
The front seat woman supported
him, “The present government, PDP, is very fond of imposing tax on people. One
after another. As all else, the vehicle tax is unfair. I think they would never
let the poor to own cars. Moreover, we never see them improving public
transportation service.”
I agreed with her. Our
domestic air service was defunct. The bus service was poor. The taxis were
expensive. But I agreed more when she stated how “selfish” and “narrow-minded” our
politicians were. Indeed, they burdened people with more and more taxes.
Indeed, they walked tax-free.
The young man sitting my
right was a fresh teacher graduate. He too joined the discussion and he was unhappy
with the government’s recent decision to select new teacher graduates in the
schools.
On my left was a teenage girl
who stood bored throughout the journey. Nothing really concerned her - neither
the fellow-passengers nor the conversation. She remained indifferent, earpiece
inserted into her ears.
Today’s youth are what they
are - apathetic, a quick thought crossed my mind, and very soon she would face
the consequence like this young teacher graduate.
We rode on and our
conversation bounced from one topic to another. We discussed a great deal about
the power tillers and Boleros when we spotted these machines on the road.
Then, almost automatically,
our topic became lighthearted and fascinating as we suddenly jumped into talking
about PDP’s helicopters and the case between Dasho Benji and DPT.
The cabbie asked, “Where is
Jigme Y Thinley, our former Prime Minister? He is unheard after his fall?”
A vague response came from
my fellow-passengers that JYT has been kept under home confinement at his
resident called Jigmeling near the Royal Thimphu College. It could be a rumour,
I thought. But long time back, I heard him offered the UN’s one of the top jobs.
About 15 minutes’ ride down
Paro brought us to the Chunzom. The road to Haa from the confluence reminded us
about the corruption case of Lhakhang Karpo construction.
“Gosh, how could the alleged
corrupt people get elected as the ministers? It happened in the past and now
too. It’s an insult to the Bhutanese democracy,” the young graduate remarked
seemingly concerned.
We came across huge trucks lumbering
carrying tons of hydropower project materials as soon as we stepped on the
Phuentsholing-Thimphu highway. We talked, almost instantly, about the alleged corrupt
practices in the hydropower business and subsequent surrendering of three
government secretaries by the PM Office.
A little beyond Chunzom, we
caught a sight of the new road to Education City, an unpopular unfinished
business of DPT.
“That’s the thing when we
change the government. Conflict of interest. Clash of egos. Millions of
ngultrums already spent there, and all of a sudden everything stopped. Complete
waste of public resources,” the woman grieved.
I didn’t realize that we
already almost reached Thimphu. For the last, we concluded our discussion stating
“the democracy is not good for a small nation like Bhutan”, “the politics is
often dirty and deceiving”, and “We prefer monarchy”.
Somehow, someway, I just
wonder now. We didn’t know each other, at all, in that taxi. We never met
before. But for the record, we gabbed about politics so wide open, free and fully
vibrant. It’s quite strange. Perhaps that is the taxi’s own way of
communication.
Happy V-DAY, dear reader!