On February 23, 2016, Mongolian
herders from western Southern
(Inner) Mongolia’s Urad Middle
Banner (“wu la te zhong qi” in
Chinese) gathered in front of
the local government building in
Haliut Township (“hai liu tu
zhen” in Chinese). Holding a
long banner reading “Confiscate
cadre-occupied land, defend
herders’ rights,” they protested
the local government officials’
illegal occupation of herders’
grazing lands and demanded
adequate compensation and
immediate return of their
grazing lands.
“Today we gathered in front of
the Banner government building
from all corners of Urad Middle
Banner to urge the government to
force those government officials
to give up their land illegally
appropriated from the local
herders,” a herder’s
representative named Burinzayaa
told the Southern Mongolian
Human Rights Information Center
(SMHRIC) over the phone.
“Hundreds of government
officials have illegally
occupied our collective land
under various pretexts.
According to relevant laws and
regulations, these officials
must give up the land
immediately and
unconditionally,” Burinzayaa
added.
According to a written statement
the SMHRIC received from the
protesters, the Bureau of Animal
Husbandry of Urad Middle Banner
has been engaging in illegal
appropriation and auction of
grazing lands collectively owned
by local pastoralist
communities. More than 1,000
Mongolian herders’ households
are affected by illegal land
transactions.
“We have been protesting for
years. We appealed to the
regional government and even the
Central Government in Beijing.
Our demands are completely
ignored,” another Mongolian
herder, named Gerlee, told the
SMHRIC.
In November of 2013, Mongolian
herders from Urad Middle Banner
visited Beijing and appealed to
Central Government authorities
about their grievances, urging
the Chinese State Council Letter
and Visitation Bureau and the
Ministry of Agriculture to
restrain local government
officials and Chinese miners
from illegally occupying their
grazing lands.
Shortly after their arrival in
Beijing, local police dispatches
from Urad Middle Banner rounded
them up in Beijing and brought
them back. The herders have been
confined to their communities
and barred from communications
with higher government
authorities since they were
brought back from Beijing.
According to written
communications received by the
SMHRIC, since 2006, the herders
have been protesting:
1. Illegal land expropriation
and land sale by local
government officials to the
Chinese;
2. Destruction of the herders’
grazing land by Chinese miners
and military bases;
3. The government’s failure to
provide adequate redress and
compensation to the affected
herders.
Organizers of all of these
protests and petitions have been
arrested, detained and jailed
multiple times by the Urad
Middle Banner Public Security
Bureau. In the latest case, at
least nine herders were arrested
and detained for staging a
protest during the Autonomous
Region Party Secretary Wang
Jun’s visit to Urad Middle
Banner last November.