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Workers drive
trucks at a coal mine in Huo Lin Guo Le, China's
north Inner Mongolia region on Nov. 10, 2010.
Chinese colonization of Mongolia for development
of resources causes human rights abuses as
grazing lands are illegally confiscated, says a
Mongolian human rights group. (Gou Yige/AFP/Getty
Images) |
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Illegal land grabs and colonization by Chinese farmers and
miners, supported by the Chinese Communist (CCP) regime, are
the source of human rights problems in Mongolia, said a
rights group.
Human rights violations of all sorts occur regularly in
Southern (Inner) Mongolia, Enghebatu Togochog, director of
the U.S.-based Southern Mongolian Human Rights Information
Center (SMHRIC), said in an interview with
The Diplomat last week.
“The Southern Mongolians completely lost faith with the
Communist Party, which has been the single political actor
responsible for designing, implementing and defending
China’s colonial policy in Southern Mongolia,” he told The
Diplomat. “As the main source of all problems in China and
Southern Mongolia, the Chinese Communist [Party] brings no
positive change, but only worsens the situation.”
Earlier this month, a group of Inner Mongolian herders were
expelled from Beijing for persistently petitioning officials
over the occupation of their grazing lands by local
officials, a military base, and Han Chinese miners. The 17
herders were sent home and placed under “strict”
surveillance and restrictions, reported
Radio Free Asia (RFA).
“The case of the Urad Middle Banner Mongolian herders is not
an isolated incident, but it is only the tip of iceberg.
Hundreds of similar incidents are happening across Southern
Mongolia, almost on a daily basis,” Togochog explained.
A
herder was beaten to death by Han Chinese railroad workers
while protesting the illegal occupation of grazing lands in
August, according to
RFA, and his relatives were placed under house arrest.
A
clash in June between six Mongolian herders and a state-run
forestry company that was operating illegally on their
grazing land, resulted in the arrest of the herders and a
hurried trial. Their families told
RFA that the herders were not allowed a proper legal
defense, and that the trial was “rushed.”
The
wife of one of the herders was beaten unconscious with an
electric baton at the entrance to the courtroom as riot
police tried to prevent family members from entering the
courtroom, her sister-in-law said.
“They beat my sister-in-law with an electric baton until she
fell over,” Longmei said. “We then started shouting that
this was supposed to be an open trial, asking why they
wouldn’t let us in.”
The
herders face up to seven years in prison for “sabotage” and
“destruction of property.”
Colonialism
Togochog said the CCP supported migration of Chinese into
Southern Mongolia as the foundation of a colonial regime
that encourages the confiscation and development of
Mongolian herders’ lands. State media reported development
plans to relocate Sichuan residents displaced by the 2008
earthquake to Inner Mongolia, the SMHRIC reported earlier
this year to
Freedom House, though the regime continues to officially
deny it.
At
least 13 Mongolians were detained in August and given
administrative punishment, with no trial, for posting to the
Internet complaints about the proposed resettlement of the
Han Chinese into the region.
One
blogger was punished for “spreading rumors” saying that
50,000 Chinese from Sichuan were to be relocated to an area,
which was home to only 20,000 Mongolian herders, and where
houses had already been built for them, said a report in
Radio Free Asia. He also posted that another 80,000
would be moved to a different area and 100,000 to yet a
different location.
“Chinese migration has always been, is still being, and will
continue to be the root cause of all sorts of violence and
human rights violations in Southern Mongolia. The very
foundation of the
Chinese colonial regime in Southern Mongolia is based on and
supported by Chinese migration,” Togochog told The Diplomat. |