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Complaint Against the Chinese Government’s Forced
Eviction of Ethnic Mongolian Herders
1. Reports on the forced eviction:
According to the Chinese authorities’ official
news agency, Xinhua News Agency, at least 200,000 ethnic
Mongolian nomadic herders will be forcibly evicted from their
native lands in northern China’s Inner Mongolia. For details,
see the attached document: China:
Inner Mongolia Desertification Leads To Large-scale of
Relocation.
According to the same report, at least 7,000
ethnic Mongolian herders had already been evicted from their
pasturelands in Inner Mongolia by July 2001. For details, see
the attached document:
China: Inner Mongolia Desertification Leads To
Large-scale of Relocation.
According to another report from the same news
agency, at least another 700 ethnic Mongolian herder families
have not been resettled after eviction from Sunid Right Wing
Banner (“Su Ni Te You Qi” in Chinese) of western Inner
Mongolia’s Shiliin Gol League (“Xi Lin Guo Le Meng” in
Chinese). For details, see the attached document:
Mongolian Herders
Going Back To “Otor”.
According to the New York Times, at least
another 100 displaced ethnic Mongolian families are scheduled
to move into a resettlement area on the outskirts of Xilinhot,
the regional capital in western Inner Mongolia. For details,
see the attached document:
Chinese Region Felled by Nature's Blows.
According to Xinhua News Agency, at least 22
banners (a geo-administrative sub-unit of the ‘aimags’ or
leagues) and counties have been named experimental units for
the government-organized “Enlarging Towns For Immigrants”
project. Among the so-called “Environmental Immigrants”, at
least 800 individuals representing 200 families are in various
stages of eviction to areas near Huhhot City, capital of Inner
Mongolian Autonomous Region. For details, see the attached
document:
Huhhot City Carrying Out “Immigrant” Projects.
According to the Voice of America, almost
800,000 Mongol and Tibetan herders in western China’s Qing Hai
Province will be evicted from their pasture lands. Among those
herders, almost 50% are Mongolian herders. For details, see
the attached document:
Nomadic Herders Vanishing In China.
According the Inner Mongolia Online website
quoting official news in China, at least 3,000 ethnic
Mongolian herders have been evicted from their ancestral lands
and forced to change their traditional way of life in
southwestern Inner Mongolia’s Otog Banner. For details, see
the attached document: Gunchirga
Village’s Herders Start to Raise Turkeys Instead of Sheep and
Cattle.
According to one of China’s most famous
official news organs, Guang Ming Daily, until last April, it
is estimated that at least 2 million person-crossings have
occurred into the Inner Mongolian grasslands from other areas
to dig hair-grass, a type of wild grass widely used for food
and medicinal products. Because of this indiscriminate digging
of the grasslands, 18% of the whole territory of Inner
Mongolia has become defoliated and turned to desert. For
details, see the attached original Chinese report:
内蒙古2
亿多亩草原遭破坏.
According to the Inner Mongolian Daily
newspaper, 50% of the territory of Baruun-Ujuur Sume, a region
of eastern Inner Mongolia formerly known as Bargu Banner, has
been destroyed as a result of the indiscriminate digging up of
“Fang-Feng”, a kind of wild grass used for Chinese medicines.
For details, see the attached original Chinese report:
呼伦贝尔大草原在哭泣.
According to China’s official news, Chi Feng
Information Net, eastern Inner Mongolia’s Aohan Banner has
sent about 30,000 persons to large cities such as Beijing,
Dalian etc as laborers because of the environmental problems
in this Banner. For details, see the attached original Chinese
report:
敖汉旗组织大规模劳务输出.
According to China’s official newspaper, Aa
Meng Daily, by August 2000, western Inner Mongolia’s
Alashan League had evicted 10,000 herders representing 8,000
families to agricultural areas. For details, see the attached
original Chinese report:
调整产业结构
优化畜群结构
阿盟决心让草场超载成为历史.
According to China’s official news bureau,
Xinhua News, more than 68 herder families have been evicted
from their lands near He-Lan-Shan Mountain and resettled in
agricultural areas and cities such as Bayanhot City and Usut
City etc. For details, see the attached original Chinese
report:
保护贺兰山.
According to China’s official news, Xinhua
News, southwestern Inner Mongolia’s Ikh-Juu League (‘aimag’ in
Mongolian, the ‘League’ is the largest geo-administrative unit
in the Inner Mongolian Autonomous Region) has started an
“Environmental Immigration Project” which will be carried out
in 8 Banners and counties, 52 sumes (the ‘sume’ is the next
smallest geo-political administrative unit after the
‘banners’) and villages, 132 ‘Gachaas’ (the ‘gachaa’ is the
smallest geo-administrative unit). It will affect a total of
45,700 people with 5,400 persons to be evicted in the first
annual plan. For details, see the attached original Chinese
report:
伊克昭盟生态移民扶贫工程启动.
According to China’s official news, Xinhua
News, western Inner Mongolia’s Bayannuur League has evicted
4,231 people and 2,000 people in 2000 and 2001 respectively
from environmentally damaged areas to the so-called “better
areas”. For details, see the attached original Chinese report:
移民的路子该怎么走?
According to China’s official news, Xinhua Net,
until March 2002, at least 40,000 ethnic Mongolian herders in
western Inner Mongolia’s Alashan League have been evicted from
their pasture lands and resettled in agricultural areas and
cities because of the government’s “banning herding” order.
For details, see the attached original Chinese report:
探访沙尘源:在失守的生态要塞守望绿色(图).
According to China’s official news, Xinhua
News, at least 25,000 people in eastern Inner Mongolia’s
Jaruud Banner have been relocated as laborers because of
environmental problems. For details, see the attached original
Chinese report:
扎鲁特旗劳务输出两万多人,
2. Estimated Number of Mongolian Herders Evicted from their
Pasturelands
According to the above reports, at
least 168,431 people have been evicted under the government’s
order in Inner Mongolia. The real number of evicted Mongolian
herders is likely to be much larger than the official
statistics report. This is because
A. most of the remote area’s evictions are not
counted and not available to the news media,
B. most of the small-scale forced evictions
are ignored by the news media,
C. because the news media are government
organs and under tight control, information about the more
egregious cases are censored so many important details and
information about the ongoing forced evictions are not
reported.
3. Why do we say these forced evictions are targeted to ethnic
Mongolians?
A. According to the reports, the areas where
forced evictions are being carried out are ethnic Mongolian
herders’ pasturelands.
B. The evictions have been restricted to
regions where it is known that most of the residents are
Mongolians still living as nomadic herders.
C. According to the sources, the main target
of the evictions is not the Han Chinese farmers even though
their over-cultivation and indiscriminate exploitation of land
are the main reasons for the environmental destruction
occurring in Inner Mongolia.
D. Using the slogan of “helping to modernize
ethnic Mongolian’s backward primitive culture”, the forced
eviction of ethnic Mongolians is really intended to complete
the Chinese government’s long-term goal of eliminating the
ethnic Mongolian population and traditional culture.
4. Why do we consider these evictions as ‘forced’ evictions?
A. According to the Xinhua News report on
behalf of Inner Mongolian Autonomous Region’s People’s
Government, Mr. Hao Yidong, vice chairman of the autonomous
region, made an official announcement on the eviction. For
details, see the attached report:
China:Inner
Mongolian desertification leads to large-scale of relocation;
B. According to the same report, Mr. Hao
Yidong also stressed that the herders “have to leave” because
“it is the only way to get rid of poverty without harming the
environment”. For details, see the attached report:
China:Inner
Mongolian desertification leads to large-scale of relocation;
C. The lack of a systematic follow-up report
on the massive eviction by various authorities points to the
desire on the part of the authorities to not draw attention to
what is happening. Here are the important facts surrounding
the forced evictions :
·
Where the evictees were resettled to and how
many were there. The authorities have not accurately reported
the total number of the evictees and the places the evictees
were sent to.
·
Most of the evictees along with their
livestock, were not properly provided for with food, water,
housing, shelter and medical services by the government. See
the attached pictures with original Chinese report:
风吹草原看不到牛羊.
·
The living conditions, especially the social,
cultural and language environment of the places where the
evictees have been moved to are not suitable for ethnic
Mongolians. Most of them were resettled to agricultural or
urban areas with overwhelmingly large Han Chinese
populations. For details, see the attached pictures and
original Chinese report:
探访沙尘源:在失守的生态要塞守望绿色(图).
·
Most of the evictees have been forced to engage
in business and agricultural life-style instead of their
traditional nomadic life-style. For details, see the attached
documents and pictures: Chinese
Region Felled by Nature's Blows ;
Nomadic Herders Vanishing in
China; Gunchirga
Village’s Herdsmen Started to Raise Turkeys Instead of Sheep
and Cattle ;
探访沙尘源:在失守的生态要塞守望绿色(图)
(with pictures);
5. Our Concerns:
A. Can the Mongolian population (perhaps 15%
of the population in the Inner Mongolian Autonomous Region)
resist the authorities’ ethnic assimilation and population
elimination policy after resettlement into an overwhelmingly
large Han Chinese population?
B. Can the Mongolians preserve their national
identity, traditional way of life, customs and language after
they are resettled into Han Chinese agricultural and urban
populations?
C. Can the Mongolians enjoy their indigenous
and minority rights as well as right to self-determination in
an overwhelmingly Han Chinese-dominated society?
D. Can they be treated equally and have access
to social, cultural and economic rights? Can they have equal
opportunities to obtain housing, medical care, education and
employment?
6. Our Demands :
A.
Urge the Chinese government to officially admit
the facts surrounding the massive forced evictions policy.
B.
Urge the Chinese government to end the ongoing
massive forced eviction of ethnic Mongolians in Inner Mongolia
and elsewhere.
C. Urge the Chinese government to return the
ethnic Mongolian evictees to their homelands.
D. Urge the Chinese government to pay proper
compensation to the ethnic Mongolian evictees for the massive
population displacement and environmental destruction to their
grasslands.
E. Urge the Chinese government to provide a
systematic and detailed follow-up survey on the forced
evictions of ethnic Mongolians with full disclosure.
F. Urge the Chinese government to recognize
that the mass population transfer policies of the central
government which brought in millions of Han Chinese farmers
into Inner Mongolia caused the destruction of the Inner
Mongolian ecology and environment through over cultivation and
indiscriminate exploitation of the Inner Mongolian grasslands.
G. Urge the Chinese government to release
official data on the Han Chinese immigrations and
environmental damage since its colonial regime started in
1949.
H. As a remedy at national level, the Chinese
government must adopt effective legislation to stop Han
Chinese immigration to Inner Mongolia.
I. As a remedy at national level, the
Chinese government must relocate the Han Chinese immigrants
out of Inner Mongolia to other provinces to end the
destruction of the traditional Mongolian society and ecology.
J. As a remedy at international level, the
Chinese government must implement the bills and covenants of
the United Nations relating to human rights to end the
violation and deprivation of ethnic Mongolians’ basic human
rights and fundamental freedoms including rights to free
association, freedom of speech and press.
7. Conclusion: A Gross Human Rights Violation Against Ethnic
Mongolians
A. The entire population of Mongolians in
Inner Mongolia (4.5 million) has been affected by this massive
forced eviction and at least 150,000 ethnic Mongolian herders’
basic human rights and fundamental freedoms have been
seriously violated by the Chinese government.
B. Ethnic Mongolians in Inner Mongolia
have lost all kinds of basic human rights, affecting their
social, economic and cultural status.
C. These violations have continued since 1949
when the Chinese Communist Party took over the region and have
intensified especially during recent years.
D. According to the Chinese official reports,
the government is planning larger forced evictions against
ethnic Mongolians instead of taking effective domestic
remedies.
Southern Mongolian Human
Rights Information Center ( SMHRIC )
37-40 79 Street
Jackson Heights Tel & Fax:
(718)899-8391
NY 11372 E-mail:
enhebatu@hotmail.com
USA
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