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SMHRIC |
September 5, 2006 |
New York |
More than
500 Mongolian villagers in Doloodai Village, Honghurtal Som,
Naiman Banner of eastern Southern (Inner) Mongolia clashed with
more than 50 Chinese police and government officials on August
18, 2006, in an unsuccessful attempt to stop the Banner Electric
Power Bureau’s bulldozers from turning up a 15 Mu ( 1.1 hectare)
woodland from their already shrunk useable land to build a power
substation. Many villagers were severely beaten up during the
clash, and two Mongolian women, Tuanhuar and Wanshii, were
arrested at the hospital by the police and Power Bureau
personnel and used as hostages until the villagers were forced
to give up their original claim on compensation. According to
the victims, at least seven Mongolian women, namely Tuanhuar,
Wanshii, Zhaoyenmii, Yinhuar, Yenhuar, Yenmii, and Yenfei, were
brutally beaten by the police and government officials while
they were attempting to cross the police surveillance line to
stop the bulldozers from proceeding.
Tuanhuar,
a 25 year old Mongolian woman, was dumped into the bulldozer’s
newly dug dirt pit after being pulled by her four limbs and
kicked and punched from every direction and fell into coma for
more than an hour. She was taken to the Banner Hospital by an
ambulance. Another woman named Wanshii (58), sister-in-law of
Tuanhuar, was also severely beaten by the police, but the
ambulance refused to give her a ride to the hospital for medical
treatment. To receive necessary treatment and assist her
sister-in-law in the hospital, Wanshii went to the same hospital
with the help of another villager who took her there with his
own three wheel tractor. Upon her arrival at the hospital, she
was arrested by the police and transferred to the Banner Public
Security Bureau Detention Center where her sister-in-law
Tuanhuar was already being held. Both women were again severely
beaten unconscious by the police and thrown on the street at
midnight. After waking up from two hours unconsciousness,
Tuanhuar and Wanshii headed toward the Banner Government to
sit-down to protest against the authorities’ outrageous act. On
the morning of August 19, they were arrested again by the police
and sent back to the Banner Public Security Bureau Detention
Center where they were injected with a heavy doze of unknown
drug that kept them sleeping for more than 48 hours until they
were released.
“I don’t
know what drug they injected to me. I slept through more than
two days and two nights, and when I woke up on the morning of
August 21, my arms swelled and I felt extremely uncomfortable
through my whole body. I have a heart problem, and the drug made
it from bad to worse. Even now, my hands are still trembling
when I hold the telephone,” the victim Wanshii told the Southern
Mongolian Human Rights Information Center over the phone. “While
I and Tuanhuar were held hostage at the detention center, the
government intimidated and forced the villagers to accept a deal
which says we will be released if and only if the villagers give
up their claim of 158,000 yuan (19,000 USD) compensation.”
According to a villager who spoke on condition of anonymity for
fear of retribution, “our entire village, home to more than a
hundred Mongolian households with a population of five hundreds,
was paid only 58,000 yuan ( 7100 USD) for the land. The original
compensation amount appearing on a contract privately done
between the Gachaa leaders and the government last year was
158,000.” Officials who met with the villagers to impose this
deal include the chairman of the Bureau of Letters and Calls (信访局)
surnamed Dong, vice chairman of the Banner Public Security
Bureau surnamed Chen, director of the local police station
surnamed Zhang, deputy town chief of Daachintal Town surnamed
Wang, and chairman of the Banner People’s Congress surnamed
Wang.
“The
contract itself is not a valid one, because it was not done with
the consent of two- thirds of the Village Committee members.
Even if it is valid, what we want is not money but our land
where we maintained our livelihood through investing our love
and care for hundreds of years. ” said another villager who also
asked not to be identified taking a strong position against the
idea of measuring land with money. However, a handful of
villagers insisted that getting some cash is better than getting
nothing because the government is powerful enough to take over
their land without paying a single penny’s compensation to them.
This fear is not unfounded, for many government officials have
recently told the villagers that “if the government want the
land, it will get it anyway, no matter whether the villagers
agree or not.”
“We can’t
open our windows even in the summer, because the wind flowing
from the chemical plant is so offensive,” Wanshii complained
about the air pollution by the Naiman Chemical Industry Zone
that took over the village’s 10 square kilometers (1000 hectare)
grassland. Home to several chemical plants including the Tong-liao
Ming-zhou Chemical Sulphoacid Plant and Tong-liao Lan-yu
Chemical Dye LLC, the Chemical Zone has not developed a proper
pollution treatment system to process its wastes. All industrial
sewage is directly poured into makeshift ponds dug on the
grassland. According to Wanshii, another large oil refinery is
under planning nearby and it will take over at least 165 Mu (12
hectare) land.
It is very
common in Southern Mongolia that both private firms and
government sectors compete to take over grasslands of indigenous
Mongols under the government’s slogan of “western development”
and “industrialization”, especially since
a new policy was
adopted in 2003 by the Autonomous Region to encourage Chinese
from all parts of China to buy, rent, and use the land of
Southern Mongolia. With little regard to the native Mongolian
communities and their natural environment, those Chinese
businesses are not only threatening the livelihood of the
Mongols by taking over their land but have also destroyed their
natural habitat through
unfettered industrial pollution. |