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Government Puts an End to Partying in Mongolia
Nomin Lhagvasuren: 3/23/01
A EurasiaNet Partner Post from Transitions
Online
ULAANBAATAR, Mongolia--A resolution passed during a 13 March
extra-governmental session ordered all authorities in Mongolia
to conduct the 2001 round of autumn and winter preparations
from 1 August until 1 October throughout the country--limiting
as much as possible the local Naadam celebrations that normally
coincide with those dates.
According to government officials, the extra preparation
time will allow citizens to take full advantage of the autumn
for harvesting, fattening livestock, and preparing feed--with
the hopes that the extra work will help the Mongolian people
make it through the winter without the major livestock losses
and starvation that have plagued the country for the last
two years. The government resolution is part of an overall
action plan for implementing the recently adopted "National
Program on Preventing Livestock from Summer Drought and Severe
Winter" that is set to be followed from 2001-2005.
The program, which was implemented for the first time in
10 years after two consecutive severe winters and last summer’s
drought, consists of three major parts: prevention of severe
livestock losses during summer drought and severe winter through
increasing the quality of work and responsibility, the ability
to undertake immediate actions if drought and dzud occurs,
and effective measures to overcome the losses occurred due
to drought and dzud . The dzud is a harsh, severe winter with
extreme snowfall, ice, winds and low temperatures.
"By this action we aim to reach 1987-1990 levels in
feed reserves. At that time, reserves amounted to 700,000
tons, compared with the only 300,000 tons that we had this
winter," said T. Ganhuyag, a livestock and water expert
at the Agriculture Ministry. According to Ganhuyag, there
are several reasons for the drastic decline in winter fodder
reserves, including the collapse of centrally planned feed
preparations, the privatization efforts at the beginning of
the 1990s when economic entities such as collective farms
were dismantled and their machinery was distributed and split
up among different owners, and a still-prevailing mentality
of expecting someone else to make preparations for the herders.
The Agriculture Ministry has devised a standard of preparation
for each herder family based on the amount of animal fodder
that must be gathered during the autumn. Those personal supplies
will be supplemented by preparations conducted separately
by the provinces. Experts at the ministry indicated that the
animal feed prepared and stored by the smaller districts and
every herder family--according to the proposed guidelines--would
be enough for approximately 10 days, if all the herders in
Mongolia were forced to feed their animals with fodder alone,
without grazing. Livestock in Mongolia normally graze for
food, but that is highly dependent on weather and other natural
conditions.
Due to insufficient winter preparations, as well as very
severe weather, Mongolia has already lost more than 1.3 million
animals this winter, according to preliminary statistics.
Animal losses during the dzud of 1999 were even more devastating:
3 million head of livestock, which represented a $91 million
loss for the country’s economy--considerably lowering the
living standard of a rural population completely dependent
on livestock.
It’s not only additional preparation that the government
is asking of its citizens, however. The resolution also specifically
limits the amount of celebration for Naadam, the ancient,
traditional festival of the Mongols. Festivities generally
include horse racing, archery and wrestling tournaments, widespread
feasts, the drinking of airag (fermented mare’s milk), singing,
and parties. Though a beloved tradition, some officials have
placed blame for Mongolia’s recent winter hardships on excessive
Naadam fetes.
"Since the beginning of the 1990s, Mongolians have
misunderstood the meaning of democracy," said S. Myagmar,
the head of the Governmental Press Office. He singled out
the elaborate Naadam feasts that have increased in length
and intricacy, especially when compared to those held during
socialist times. "Mongolians, from ordinary herders to
the president of the country, have had to beg for help every
single winter [since then], and we haven’t even prepared ourselves
with a handful of feed to survive the dzud." According to
Myagmar, the resolution will mobilize the rural population--free
of distractions from Naadam--to complete winter preparations
during the time most appropriate to do so. The resolution
was also seen as anticipatory, since many provinces in Mongolia
will be celebrating anniversaries this year--a fact that would
have given rise to even more elaborate celebrations.
Though the opposition Democratic Party had no official comment
on the resolution, some of its officials evinced skepticism
about the governmental resolution as a method of improving
winter preparations. Democratic Party official Y. Sanjmyatav
said he was doubtful that better preparations for winter could
be achieved by ruling away people’s celebrations. "Instead
of trying to stop celebrations by issuing an order,"
he said, "It would be better to think about assisting
the livestock economy or mobilizing jobless people in brigades
to help to conduct winter preparation."
Nergui, the party's information officer, even called the
resolution a "proletarian dictatorship for too small
of a matter," though he stressed that the view was his
alone and not that of his party. He also said that people
won’t pay attention to the resolution, and the government
will not be able to stop the celebrations. The ruling party
has left matters of non-compliance up to the local governments.
The above story is reposted with permission from Transitions
Online (TOL). TOL (http://www.tol.cz)
is an Internet magazine covering Central and Eastern Europe,
the Balkans, and the former Soviet Union. If you aren't already
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Posted March 23, 2000 © Eurasianet
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