Families of four ethnically Nepali Bhutanese refugees visit their loved ones at Pike County Correctional Facility. ICE arrested the men in early March. Tilak Niroula, center left, community leader for the Bhutanese refugee community in Central Pennsylvania, and Dauphin County Commissioner Justin Douglas, center right, organized the visit for the families.
Jordan Wilkie / WITF News
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As the democracy reporter for WITF, I will cover any kind of story that has to do with how we govern ourselves. That will include doing a lot of election coverage about how to access the ballot, how public officials administer elections, the technology used to run and secure elections, and the laws that govern it all.
My work will also include accountability coverage for elected officials that use their positions to then undermine democratic institutions, like the legislators that voted against the certification of the presidential election results on January 6, 2021. If that weren’t enough, I foresee covering some local government decisions, fights over public records and transparency, and some candidate coverage in 2024. Many stories can have a “democracy frame” meant to help us all understand how our governments work and how we can shape them.
I’m most looking forward to the community reporting about which WITF is passionate. I’ll be talking to a lot of folks about what they want out of their governments, local to national, and how they want to make their visions reality. I’m excited to meet you and talk, with or without a microphone on hand.
I also like to turn my work phone off. When I do that, I’m looking for rocks to climb, trails to run on (slower and slower, somehow), and new places to visit. I’ve lived in the (extended) South for most of my life, so y’all will hear me say things funny and sometimes my hearing is funny, too, so we’ll figure out this radio thing together.
Jordan Wilkie / WITF News
Families of four ethnically Nepali Bhutanese refugees visit their loved ones at Pike County Correctional Facility. ICE arrested the men in early March. Tilak Niroula, center left, community leader for the Bhutanese refugee community in Central Pennsylvania, and Dauphin County Commissioner Justin Douglas, center right, organized the visit for the families.
Gov. Josh Shapiro on Tuesday addressed the recent detention of Bhutanese refugees by federal immigration authorities, saying he expects the Trump administration to follow the rule of law.
“They’ve been an important part of the social fabric, and the economic fabric, the educational fabric, the cultural fabric of our communities,” Shapiro said of the 70,000 Bhutanese in Pennsylvania – 40,000 of whom are in South Central Pennsylvania, he said.
“I want to make sure that anyone who has been rounded up by the federal government is given their full due process,” Shapiro said. “I expect the Trump administration to honor the law, to respect the law, and ensure those they’ve come in contact with receive due process.”
At least 10 Nepali-speaking Bhutanese refugees from Pennsylvania were in Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody as of Tuesday, community leaders said. Seven of them are from Dauphin, Lancaster or York counties.
The men fear imminent deportation, based on what ICE officials are telling them, according to information provided by family members and community leaders like Tilak Niroula, the current board chair of the Bhutanese Community in Harrisburg.
Niroula has been heading his community’s response to the ICE arrests, including working with elected officials to try to pressure ICE to release more information on why the arrests are happening now, and what will happen to those who are detained. So far, they have received no responses.
WITF has also not received responses from ICE about the status of the men’s cases.
Niroula said he met with Gov. Josh Shapiro on Monday to brief him on the situation, and he said he has a meeting with U.S. Sen. John Fetterman’s office on Wednesday and U.S. Rep. Scott Perry on Friday.
He already gained the support of a suite of local Democratic elected officials, who joined Dauphin County Commissioner Justin Douglas on March 18 to decry the first six known ICE arrests from the Nepali-speaking Bhutanese community. State Reps. Dave Madsen, D-Dauphin, Justin Fleming, D-Dauphin, Joseph Hohenstein, D-Philadelphia, and state Sen. Patty Kim, D-Dauphin all spoke against ICE’s actions and encouraged people to reach out to federal officials.
In the 1980s and 1990s, Bhutan’s government drove out one-sixth of its population when a nationalist government ethnically cleansed the Nepali-speaking Lhotshampa people from the southern part of the country. Over 100,000 refugees settled in refugee camps in Nepal.
Between 2006 to 2016, the U.S. admitted 85,000 Bhutanese refugees as the main partner in a United Nations resettlement program.
‘Not a winning issue’
Three of the detained men – Ashok Gurung and Maita Gurung, no relation and both of Harrisburg, and Bidur Khadka, of Pittsburgh – are being held at Pike County Correctional Facility. Ashok Gurung has a removal order dating back to July 2017 and, according to family members, never received a green card. He was arrested for felony assault in Georgia in 2013.
Khadka had a series of arrests for assault and domestic violence from 2019 through 2021. He was given removal orders in August 2023.
Maita Gurung has a long string of arrests related to public drunkenness and at least one guilty plea for simple assault and terroristic threats with intent to terrorize another in 2013. His family has not been able to find the paperwork and documentation to track the status of his case.
WITF is only releasing the names of individual detainees with their families’ permission or as they become part of the public record.
On March 18, Niroula said each of the six arrested men they knew of at the time had green cards and were legal permanent residents. In a statement released the next day, ICE contested that, stating the men arrested were not lawful permanent residents and that ICE was conducting routine operations.
WITF reviewed active green cards for three of the detained men.
In advocating on the detainee’s behalf, Niroula said he is relying on information shared from their families, who often do not have all the details about their loved one’s immigration status. For example, Khadka’s family did not know he had removal orders dating back to August 2023 until WITF shared those records.
Dauphin County’s Douglas said he’s been advised that advocating for these men is not a winning political issue. He said the fact that these men have criminal histories does not change the importance of protecting their rights, especially given the possibility of their deportation and the larger impact on the Bhutanese refugee community.
People who commit crimes need to be held accountable in the criminal justice system, Douglas said. He supports the deportation of confirmed gang members. But the bar has to be really high when deporting refugees, he said.
“I take a more compassionate angle on that rather than banning them from the country,” Douglas said.
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A collection of interviews, photos, and music videos, featuring local musicians who have stopped by the WITF performance studio to share a little discussion and sound. Produced by WITF’s Joe Ulrich.