As the Chinese Central
Government Work Inspection Team
arrived in the troubled region
of Southern (Inner) Mongolia
recently, protests of various
forms have taken place in rural
Mongolian pastoralist
communities across multiple
banners (“banner” is an
administrative unit equivalent
to a county). Since last week
alone, at least 10 separate
protests have been reported.
April 24, 2017:
Nearly 200 Mongolian herders
from Tsegeen Sum of eastern
Southern Mongolia’s Ongniud
Banner staged a protest in front
of a pig farm that has recently
occupied a large piece of
grazing land of the local
herders. The protestors held a
long banner and chanted slogans,
demanding the closure of the pig
farm and the immediate return of
the grazing land.
“We are here today to demand our
right to clean air, clean water
and justice for the herders,” a
protestor said in a video clip
released on WeChat.
April 24, 2017:
Herders from Naiman Banner of
eastern Southern Mongolia’s
Tongliao Municipality gathered
in front of the local government
building, demanding the return
of herders’ grazing land.
The herders held a large banner
reading, “Return Our Oboodai
Gachaa’s 50,000 mu Land, Return
Our Pristine Nature.” In a video statement
issued by the protestors, a
herder said, “The Banner
Government sold our 50,000 mu
land, leaving us landless.”
April 24, 2017:
Herders from eastern Southern
Mongolia’s Hulun-boir League’s
Old Barag Right Banner published
an open letter on Chinese social
media, demanding the Chinese
Central Government Work
Inspection Team carry out a
thorough investigation into
illegal land grabbing and police
brutality in the local Mongolian
pastoralist communities.
The open letter states that 19
herders were arbitrarily
detained during a clash between
the Chinese police and local
herders in 2015.
April 22, 2017:
On behalf of pastoralist
communities of Shiliin-gol
League, activist and community
leader Ms. Naranhuaar (also
known as Yanjindulam) published
a video statement, urging the
Central Government Work
Inspection Team to redress the
grievances of Mongolian herders
in the Shiliion-gol region.
April 21, 2017:
Herders from Shuluun-Chagaan
Banner of Shiliin-gol League
gathered in the regional
capital, Hohhot, to demand a
meeting with the Central
Government Work Inspection Team.
Herders protested the local
authorities’ illegal
appropriation of grazing land
and the failure to redress the
herders’ demands. Local Public
Security agents arrested the
herders’ leader, Chimgee, and
brought her back to
Shuluun-Chagaan Banner.
April 21, 2017:
Herders from western Southern
Mongolia’s Darhan-Muumingan
Joint Banner came to the
regional capital of Hohhot to
demand justice for the herders.
Ms. Oyuunchimeg and Ms.
Burentsetseg published a video
statement protesting the Chinese
authorities’ land grab, mining,
pollution, livestock grazing
ban, arbitrary detention and
illegal confiscation of herders’
livestock.
“Herders are plundered of their
livestock and subjected to large
sum of fines. The life of
herders is like a hell,”
Oyuunchimeg said in the video
statement, “mining, pollution
and depletion of water pushed us
herders to the edge of extreme
poverty. We trusted the sunshine
policy of the great Party which
in turn led us to poverty,
marginalization and destruction
and natural environment.”
April 21, 2017:
In eastern Southern Mongolia’s
Horchin Right Wing Middle
Banner, some desperate herders
blocked the entourage of the
Work Inspection Team, bringing
their grievances directly to the
inspection officials despite the
security personnel’s seemingly
relatively restrained
intervention.
In video footage taken at the
scene, an outraged herder rushed
to the inspection officials
during their visit to a rural
Mongolian family and repeatedly
shouted, “Officials sold the
land of Bayannuur Sum for own
profit! No way is left to us to
make livings! No way is left to
us to make livings!”
April 19, 2017:
Mongolian herders—including Ms.
Urgamal and Ms. Altantovch from
western Southern Mongolia’s
Hangin Banner, Ms. Otgon from
Otog Banner, and Ms.
Tsetsenchimeg from Urad Middle
Banner—gathered in Hohhot,
appealing to the Central
Government Work Inspection Team
for a just solution to herders’
plight. In a joint video
statement, four herders from the
three banners brought to the
attention of the inspection
officials the cases of Chinese
settlers’ illegal occupation of
Mongolian herders’ grazing lands
and the local governments’
failure to take any action to
protect the herders’ rights.