Following a two-month protest,
on July 21, 2020, more than 300
Mongolian herders from Bayan-uul
Sum (a sum is an administrative
unit equivalent to a township)
of Southern (Inner) Mongolia’s
Bairin Left Banner (a banner is
an administrative unit
equivalent to a county) gathered
again in front of the banner
government building in Lindong
City.
Holding large signs reading, “We
want justice. Return our legal
rights,” “We strongly protest
government officials ganging up
with thugs to oppress the
people!” “We strongly protest
government officials
disregarding laws to destroy
people’s livelihoods!” and
“Bairin Left Banner Government
must return our legal rights,”
herders demanded an immediate
response from the banner
governor.
The local police and SWAT team
were deployed to block the
herders from accessing the
government building.
Representatives of the herders
were pushed back by the SWAT
team when attempting to get
through the city hall entrance
to meet the governor.
“We are herders from Bayan-uul
Sum, gathering here today to
urge the government to answer
our demand,” a herder told the
Southern Mongolian Human Rights
Information Center via a WeChat
message. “The government is
abusing its power to bully the
herders and destroying our land
and livelihoods.”
“The banner government illegally
appropriated our grazing land
under the name of nature
conservation project without our
consent. We will defend our
ancestral land at any cost,”
another herder said in a video
clip.
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.
Starting in late May, the
herders of Bayan-uul Sum
organized themselves to stage
protests and petitions on daily
basis. During a protest on June
1, herders were pepper-sprayed
and beaten up by local public
security personnel and riot
police while marching toward the
government capital. Nearly 200
were arrested or detained.
In February, the banner
government sent a notice to the
herders of Bayan-uul Sum about
the planned appropriation of
grazing land for a national
project of nature conservation.
Herders from all 13 gachaa (a
gachaa is an administrative unit
comprised of several villages)
sent their representatives to
the sum and banner governments
to protest the illegal
appropriation.
According to communications from
the local herders, the Bairin
Left Banner Government has
already received a large amount
of funds from the higher levels
of government after sending a
falsified proposal that inflated
the total area of land to meet
the national nature conservancy
requirement.
“The banner government is
robbing our land in order to
benefit from the so-called
‘national nature conversation
project,’ disregarding our legal
rights. We will fight to the end
until justice is done,” another
herder said in an audio
statement to SMHRIC via WeChat.