He also demanded that the Sunaha should be provided reservation quotas in all the state services as the Sunaha is a minority community.
He added that the government has recognized the Raute community that is on the verge of disappearance as a separate ethnic minority group and is providing allowances. But he said that the Sunaha community is deprived of such state allowances as it has not been recognized as a separate ethnic group. Meghadevi Sunar complained that the political parties have been using the Sunaha community merely as a vote bank at the time of the election. "The political parties and their candidates only make false promises to us at the time of election that they will resolve our burning problems. There is nobody to speak for us after the election is over," she said. According to her, although they have demanded time and again with the government to recognize the Sunaha as a separate ethnic community, their demands have not been heard. The Sunaha people traditionally live by collecting gold from sand on river banks. The Sunaha's traditional occupation is also on the verge of disappearance in recent years. Ghanashyam Sunaha called for making provision for providing free education to the Sunaha children. "Sunaha is also a separate tribe like the Raute. The government should provide quotas to Sunaha like it is providing to other indigenous nationalities. We should also be recognized as having a separate ethnic identity," Ghanashyam said. The Sunaha communities who live only in Bardia and Kanchanpur have been calling for recognizing them as separate indigenous nationalities since long, but their demand has so far fallen on deaf ears.