Bhojpuri is primarily spoken in the districts of Bhojpur, Buxar, Saran, Champaran, Kaimur and Rohtas. It is also the main dialect of eastern Uttar Pradesh. During the Colonial era, peasants from Bihar migrated to work as indentured labour in sugarcane plantations in Guyana, Mauritius, Trinidad and Tobago, Suriname and Fiji. Consequently, Bhojpuri and its variants is still spoken in some of these countries. Bhojpuri was initially written in Kaithi, a script used for writing legal, administrative and private records during the Mughal rule and the British Raj. Now the Devanagari script has supplanted Kaithi. There has been a longstanding demand to recognise Bhojpuri as a distinct language and not merely a dialect of Hindi. In 2012, Ravikant Dubey, Chairperson of the Bhojpuri Academy, sent letters to several Members of Parliament with the same demand. In response, P Chidambaram, the then Home Minister of India, said in BhojpuriHum rauwasabke bhavna samjhatani (I understand your feelings). Chidambarams response made it to the newspapers and received plaudits from Meira Kumar, the then-Speaker of the Lok Sabha and a native of Bihar. Nevertheless, Bhojpuri has still not been recognised as an official language.