On August 13, 2020, more than
300 Mongolian herders from
Southern Mongolia’s Durbed
Banner took to the streets of
the banner capital to protest
government-backed pig farming.
At least three herdswomen were
beaten by the police at the
protest scene in front of the
government building.
Holding long banners reading “No
to pig farming on grasslands, no
to destruction of natural
environment,” herders shouted
slogans in front of the
government building: “We don’t
want pig farms! We want our
grasslands protected!”
Video clips the Southern
Mongolian Human Rights
Information Center (SMHRIC)
received from the protesters
show that local police attempted
to block the marching herders
from entering the government
premises and confiscated their
banners.
“Police twisted our hands and
confiscated our banners,” a
herdswoman said in a cell phone
video clip she took at the
scene. “Two elderly ladies’
hands were badly injured, and I
am in severe pain.”
According to a local herder at
the protest named Hasbaatar, the
Durbed Banner government
recently made a deal with a
Chinese investor to set up seven
pig farms on the local herders’
grazing land without the free,
prior, and informed consent of
local Mongolian communities.
“As a result of our strong
protest, all seven pig farms
suspended their operations 70
days ago,” Mr. Hasbaatar said in
an audio statement. “But three
days ago, the largest of the
seven resumed operation again.
This is why we are here today to
protest.”
As part of the larger campaign
of eradicating the traditional
Mongolian way of life in
Southern Mongolia, the Chinese
government has promoted
large-scale pig farming on
grasslands, sparking a series of
protests in rural Mongolian
pastoralist communities.
According to the Chinese
Agricultural Net (www.ny160.com),
the Chinese Ministry of Land and
Resources announced a new policy
allowing Chinese animal farming
industries to appropriate land
without any approval process.
An article entitled “The Central
Government’s Special Approval:
Starting September, Agricultural
and Pig Farming Land
Appropriation Needs No
Approval!” published on the
Chinese Agricultural Net on
August 29, 2019, says that “no
local government shall restrict
or ban any large-scale animal
farming in the name of expanding
rural villages or recovering
ecosystems” (see original source
here:
http://www.ny160.com/news_1222_37.html).
“The Chinese are free to do
whatever they want on Southern
Mongolian land. They are free to
raise pigs. They are free to
cultivate grassland. They are
free to plunder our natural
resources and free to destroy
our land,” Mr. Sechenbaatar, a
Southern Mongolian writer and
activist, said in an audio
statement via WeChat. “Southern
Mongolian land is open for
everything except for the
traditional Mongolian way of
life.”