On 14 December 2006 the Fourth Druk Gyalpo Jigme Singye Wangchuck abdicated the throne of Bhutan in favour of his eldest son, Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck. The handover, signalled by a royal kasho on 9 December, brought forward by roughly two years a transition the Fourth King had publicly trailed since December 2005, and prepared the country for the constitutional and democratic transformation that followed in 2008.
The 2006 abdication of Jigme Singye Wangchuck took place on 14 December 2006, when the Fourth Druk Gyalpo of Bhutan formally relinquished the throne in favour of his eldest son, Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck, then 26 years old. The decision was announced by royal kasho on 9 December 2006 and took effect five days later, ending a reign of 34 years that had begun in 1972.[1]
The abdication was the culmination of a programme of constitutional reform set in motion in 2001, when the Fourth King appointed a 39-member committee under the chief justice to draft a written constitution. In December 2005 he had publicly stated that he intended to step down in 2008, the year the new constitution was expected to be adopted. The decision to bring forward the handover by close to two years gave the new king time to settle into the role, and to take a leading part in the consultations that preceded the adoption of the Constitution of Bhutan on 18 July 2008 and the country's first parliamentary elections.[2]
The Fifth King's accession on 14 December 2006 was followed by a sequence of public ceremonies in 2007 and a state coronation at Punakha Dzong on 6 November 2008, timed to coincide with the centenary of the Wangchuck dynasty. The 2006 abdication itself was not accompanied by a separate state ceremony of the same scale; the formal transfer of authority was effected through the kasho and through the new king's investiture as Druk Gyalpo.[1]
Background
Jigme Singye Wangchuck had ascended the throne on 24 July 1972 at the age of 16, following the sudden death of his father Jigme Dorji Wangchuck. By the late 1990s he had begun to delegate executive functions to a Council of Ministers, and from 1998 the cabinet was elected by the Tshogdu from a roster of candidates nominated by the king. These changes were presented at the time as steps in a deliberate, monarch-led democratisation rather than concessions to internal pressure.[3]
On 17 December 2005, addressing crowds at Trashiyangtse during the National Day celebrations, the Fourth King announced that he would step down in 2008 in favour of his son and that the country would by then have adopted a written constitution and held parliamentary elections. He framed the change as a long-planned transfer rather than an emergency: in his own words, the best time to introduce democracy was when the country was at peace, and reliance on a single individual was unwise for a small Himalayan state.[3]
The 2005 announcement was met with public dismay in many districts. During the constitutional consultations that followed, citizens at zomdues (community meetings) repeatedly petitioned the king to remain on the throne, and a draft of the constitution was circulated to every household for comment. The 9 December 2006 kasho, issued from Tashichho Dzong in Thimphu, brought the timetable forward and pre-empted any further public effort to dissuade him.[4]
The Kasho and the Transfer
The royal kasho of 9 December 2006 announced that the Fourth King would relinquish the throne to the Crown Prince. On 14 December 2006 the throne formally passed to Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck. The new king's accession at age 26 made him among the youngest reigning monarchs in the world. His father retained no constitutional role under the existing legal order; the abdication was complete, not regency.[1]
The transfer was followed by mock parliamentary elections in April 2007, designed to familiarise the electorate with ballot procedures, and by elections to the National Council on 31 December 2007. The first National Assembly elections were held on 24 March 2008. The Druk Phuensum Tshogpa, led by Jigmi Y. Thinley, won 45 of 47 seats. The new constitution was adopted by the first elected Parliament on 18 July 2008.[2]
The 2008 Coronation
The state coronation of the Fifth King took place at Punakha Dzong on 6 November 2008, almost two years after the abdication itself. The date was chosen to coincide with the centenary of the founding of the Wangchuck dynasty in 1907. Religious rites at Punakha were followed by public celebrations at Tashichho Dzong and at Changlimithang Stadium in Thimphu. The two-year interval between the 2006 abdication and the 2008 coronation reflected the Bhutanese practice of selecting an astrologically auspicious date for the formal investiture, and aligned the coronation with the dynastic anniversary.[1]
Significance
The abdication is unusual in modern monarchy in three respects. First, it was voluntary, undertaken in the absence of internal protest, external pressure or constitutional crisis. Second, it was tied explicitly to a programme of self-imposed democratisation: the throne was vacated specifically so that the next monarch would assume office under a written constitution and an elected legislature. Third, the timing was advanced by close to two years from the originally announced 2008 schedule, which had the practical effect of placing the Fifth King in office before the constitutional referendum and the first general election rather than after them.[2]
The Fourth King has continued to be a public figure since the abdication, but has scrupulously avoided any visible role in elected government. He is widely referred to as the "Fourth Druk Gyalpo" or "the People's King" in Bhutanese public discourse, and continues to take part in religious and ceremonial events, particularly those linked to the Gross National Happiness framework with which his reign is closely identified.[5]
References
See also
Jigme Singye Wangchuck
Jigme Singye Wangchuck (born 1955) was the fourth Druk Gyalpo of Bhutan, reigning from 1972 to 2006. He coined the concept of Gross National Happiness, initiated Bhutan's transition from absolute monarchy to constitutional democracy, and voluntarily abdicated the throne — but his reign also encompassed the ethnic cleansing of over 100,000 Lhotshampa from southern Bhutan.
history·5 min readCoronation of Jigme Singye Wangchuck
The coronation of Jigme Singye Wangchuck as the 4th Druk Gyalpo of Bhutan was conducted in three ceremonies between 1972 and 1974. The public outer coronation on 2 June 1974 at Tashichho Dzong, attended by foreign heads of state and the international media, marked Bhutan's first formal opening to foreign visitors and is the date conventionally observed as the coronation anniversary.
history·4 min readCoronation of Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck
The coronation of Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck as the fifth Druk Gyalpo took place on 6 November 2008, two years after his accession in December 2006. Held at Punakha Dzong and Tashichho Dzong, the date was chosen to coincide with the centenary of the Wangchuck dynasty.
history·4 min readKing Jigme Dorji Wangchuck (1929–1972)
Jigme Dorji Wangchuck (1929–1972), the Third Druk Gyalpo, is revered as the "Father of Modern Bhutan" for his sweeping programme of modernization that transformed a feudal, isolated kingdom into a developing nation. He established the National Assembly, abolished serfdom, launched Bhutan's first Five-Year Plan, and secured the country's membership in the United Nations in 1971.
history·5 min readThe Voluntary Abdication of the Fourth King (2006)
In December 2006, King Jigme Singye Wangchuck voluntarily abdicated the throne of Bhutan in favour of his son, Crown Prince Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck, culminating a deliberate process of democratic transition that the king had initiated over the objections of much of his own population. The abdication led to Bhutan's first democratic elections in 2008 and the adoption of a written constitution, making it one of the few cases in modern history where a reigning monarch willingly surrendered absolute power.
history·6 min readJigme Wangchuck
Jigme Wangchuck (1905-1952) was the second Druk Gyalpo (Dragon King) of Bhutan, ruling from 1926 until his death. He consolidated central authority over Bhutan's previously fragmented governance, pursued legal and infrastructural reform, and maintained a policy of near-total isolation from the outside world to protect the kingdom's sovereignty.
history·5 min read
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