On
June 18, 2017, more than a
hundred Mongolian herders from Duruu-nuur Gachaa, Darhan-uul
Sum of eastern Southern
Mongolia’s Heshigten Banner
gathered near the Dalai-nuur
Lake shore to defend their
grazing land and sacred water.
Chinese fishermen and riot
police attacked the protesters
with pepper spray and batons. At
least nine Mongolian herders
were arrested and dragged away
by police after being severely
beaten.
“Riot police are beating our
people and spraying an unknown
substance at our eyes,” a
herdswoman at the scene said in
a short footage. “Our eyes are
burning and having difficulty
seeing.”
“Many are beaten and several
arrested and taken away,” the
protestor added.
According to another video clip
obtained by the Southern
Mongolian Human Rights
Information Center (SMHRIC), a
herdswoman was beaten on the
ground and taken away by the
riot police shortly afterward.
Another herdsman was beaten down
on the ground by nearly a dozen
riot police and handcuffed
before being carried away.
Herders have been appealing to
the local government against the
Chinese fishery's arbitrary
occupation of their grazing land
and the denial of the herders'
right to access the grazing land
and lake water that they have
depended on for generations.
A
court decision issued on June
16, 2017 by the Heshigten Banner
People’s Court reveals that the
Chinese local authorities are
apparently favoring the Chinese
fishery and banning the herders
from accessing the lake water
and grazing near the lake bank.
“In order not to affect the
normal production of both
parties, and to avoid the
possible escalation of the
conflict,” the court paper
states that the application made
by the head of the fishery to
demolish the fences built by the
defendants was decided in the
following manner:
1.
Fences built by the four
defendants near the Dalai-nuur
bank in 2017 shall be
demolished; and;
2.
During the appeal period,
defendants shall not build any
temporary or permanent
infrastructure near the lake
bank.
As the determined herders
gathered near the lake bank to
stage the protest, supporters
from other pastoralist
communities rallied over social
media in solidarity with the
Heshigten herders.
A
widely circulated open letter
written in Mongolian in support
of the herders’ plight states
that “it is the time for us
Mongolians to stand up to fight
the Chinese invaders.”
“As a result of 70 years of
Chinese occupation, our
ancestral territory is taken
away. We the owners of the land
have been enslaved. It is the
time for change! It is the time
for us to stand up to defend our
land with our blood!” the
concluding paragraph of the
letter states.