Herders protest government land grab, nearly 200 arrested
SMHRIC
Jun 2, 2020
New York
More than 400 herders from
Bairin Left
Banner protest government land grabbing. Nearly 200 have been
arrested (SMHRIC
- 2020-06-02)
On the morning of June 1, 2020,
more than 400 Mongolian herders
from Bayan-uul Sum (a sum is an
administrative unit equivalent
to township) of Southern
(Inner) Mongolia’s Bairin Left
Banner ( a banner is an
administrative unit equivalent
to county) marched toward the
banner capital Lindong City in
protest of the local
government’s land grab in the
name of nature conservancy.
Nearly 200 were arrested on
their way to the banner
government by local police and
SWAT teams. Many were pepper
sprayed and beaten before being
detained.
Bayan-uul Sum, located on the
northern edge of Bairin Left
Banner, has a piece of
relatively well-preserved
natural grassland where local
Mongolian herders have struggled
to maintain their traditional
pastoralist way of life.
“This February, the banner
government notified us that a
national nature conservancy will
be established on our grazing
land,” a local herder named
Geeligbuyan told the Southern
Mongolian Human Rights
Information Center. “Herders
from all 13 Gachaa of Bayan-uul
Sum sent representatives twice
to the regional capital Hohhot
to express our protest.”
“We learned that the Autonomous
Region Party Secretary Shi
Taifeng is on an inspection tour
to the banner capital today.
More than 400 herders from all
of our pastoralist communities
across Bayan-uul Sum organized
ourselves to show our protest to
the local government and raise
our concern to the regional
party secretary,” Geeligbuyan
said in an audio statement to
the SMHRIC.
Video footage shows that
protesters were stopped en route
to the banner capital and taken
away by police and security
personnel.
“Look, this is how we are
treated by police. Many of us
innocent herders are pepper
sprayed on our way to Lindong,”
a protester said in a video clip
showing a woman who was
apparently suffering the effects
of pepper spray.
Other footage shows that some
herders were forcibly carried
away and thrown into police
vehicles before being taken to
the local police station and the
Bureau of Letters and Visits.
“We are locked up in here in the
Bureau of Letters and Visits,” a
protester said, showing dozens
of others in a short video clip.
“Still hundreds of others were
able to manage to get to Lindong
and gathered before the banner
government yesterday. I was one
of them,” Geeligbuyan told the
SMHRIC. “Today is June 2, the
second day of our protest. At
least 400-500 herders are on
their way to protest.”
“Release the detained herders!
Stop the arrests!” herders
shouted in front of the
government building in another
clip.
“The Bairin Left Banner
Government is lying to us. The
so-called ‘national nature
conservancy’ is just a pretext
for grabbing our land, our
ancestral land where we have
lived for generations,”
Geelingbuyan continued. “Land is
our lifeline. Land is our last
stronghold. We will fight to the
end to defend our land.”