Ladies and Gentlemen: My name is Enghebatu Togochog. I represent the Southern Mongolian Human Rights Information Center (SMHRIC), a New York based human rights organization dedicated to promoting and protecting the rights of the Mongolian people in China. I would like to thank the Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization (UNPO), and the Society for Threatened Peoples for organizing this event and providing us with a platform to talk about the problems and crisis we are facing as the government of China intensifies its policies of political repression, cultural eradication, economic exploitation, and environmental destruction in Southern Mongolia, East Turkistan and Tibet. Home to six million indigenous Mongolian people, Southern Mongolia, widely known as “Inner” Mongolia, had been an integral part of the Mongolian nation up until 1947 when the Chinese Communist Party took control over the region. Since then, Southern Mongolia has experienced its darkest era ever in Mongolian history; during these six decades, the Chinese government has carried out state-sponsored ethnic-cleansing, heavy-handed political repression, large scale population transfer, forced cultural assimilation and near total destruction of the natural environment in Southern Mongolia. Today, as a result of large scale Chinese population transfer, the Mongols constitute only 18% of the total population in the region. They have become an absolute minority in their own lands; the natural grasslands where the Mongols maintained their nomadic way of life for thousands of years have been destroyed by unscrupulous mining operations and the non-sustainable farming practices of millions of Chinese immigrants. The systemic land grabbing started in as early as 1947 when the Chinese Communists took over Southern Mongolia. Tens of thousands of Mongolians were brutally killed and Mongolian land was effectively taken over by the Chinese settlers during the so-called “Land Reform Movement.” Since then, millions of Chinese peasants and army personnel poured into the Southern Mongolian grasslands to start setting up large scale farms and forestry. To justify its systemic land grabbing and cover up their destruction of the natural environment, the Chinese government adopted the so-called “Ecological Migration” policy in Southern Mongolia. This policy was officially instituted in 2001 to forcibly relocate the entire indigenous Mongolian herding and semi-herding population from their ancestral grazing lands to the overwhelmingly Chinese populated agricultural and urban areas under the pretext of “protecting the grassland eco-system.” An equally egregious policy instituted shortly after was the “Total Ban over Livestock Grazing” (or “jin mu”). Under this policy, Mongolian herders grazing livestock in the grasslands were regarded as criminals and subject to large fines or total confiscation of their livestock. Thus, Mongolian people have been forced to abandon their traditional way of life and adopt an urban or agricultural lifestyle. With the largest coal and natural gas source in China, including production of 95% of the world’s rare earth supplies, Southern Mongolia was recently advertised by the Chinese Government as “China’s Energy Base.”

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