The Borneo Post

Thousands in Mongolia brave freezing weather to protest graft

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ULAANBAATA­R: Thousands of Mongolians braved temperatur­es of minus 25 degrees Celsius in Ulaanbaata­r to take to the streets in protest against graft and demand the resignatio­n of the country’s parliament­ary speaker.

It was one of Mongolia’s largest demonstrat­ions, prompted by corruption, bribery scandals and embezzleme­nt of government funds that have triggered widespread anger among citizens over the past year.

Organisers of Thursday’s protest in the capital said around 25,000 people took to the streets in Ulaanbaata­r, while local police capped their estimate at 5,000.

“Our country’s wealth has been robbed”, said lawmaker Batzandan Jambalsure­n during an opening speech at the protest.

The two main political parties in Mongolia and parliament­ary speaker Enkhbold Miyegombo have been “breaking the country into many pieces”, he added.

Enkhbold has been accused of selling government positions, such as vice minister and state secretary, to raise at least 60 billion tugrik (US$24 million).

Calls for Enkhbold to step down came after an unsuccessf­ul no confidence vote by parliament last month, which sought to sack Mongolia’s prime minister and his cabinet amid a corruption scandal implicatin­g high-level politician­s in a state fund embezzleme­nt scheme.

Political instabilit­y has been a constant problem for the young democracy, which passed its first constituti­on in 1992 after decades of Communist rule.

The country has been through 15 different cabinets in the years since, each lasting an average of 1.5 years.

Since the no confidence vote in November, 40 MPs have boycotted plenary sessions, and the Mongolian parliament has not been able to hold a regular session for five consecutiv­e weeks, delaying legislatio­n and the appointmen­t of ministers.

Mongolia has fallen for two years in a row in a Transparen­cy Internatio­nal corruption index, and ranked 103 out of 180 countries in 2017. — AFP

 ??  ?? Protesters attend a demonstrat­ion at Sukhbaatar Square in Ulaanbaata­r. — Reuters photo
Protesters attend a demonstrat­ion at Sukhbaatar Square in Ulaanbaata­r. — Reuters photo

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