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Elbegdorj is a patron of World Sustainable Development Forum. [7] He is the Bernard and Susan Liautaud visiting fellow at Stanford University's Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies. [8] Elbegdorj is a president of World Mongol Federation - an international federation of Mongols around the world. [9]
Former Mongolian President Elbegdorj Tsakhia offers some advice to new Singaporean President Tharman Shanmugaratnam: abolish the death penalty, and your country will be better off.
Many now-prominent figures such as Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj along with Dari-Sukhbaatar and Chimediin Enkhee were members of the union and would eventually come be known as the Thirteen Leaders of Mongolia's Democratic Revolution. [14] [15] [16] Members of the Union and anyone associated with the movement had to be secretive to ensure their ...
Elbegdorj won with 65.3% of the total vote. [34] After Elbegdorj was announced as the candidate, the Civic Will Party and the Mongolian Green Party endorsed Elbegdorj's presidential candidacy. [35] Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj won the 2009 Mongolian presidential election on 24 May 2009 with 51.21% of the votes.
“We are really closer to that doomsday,” former Mongolian president Elbegdorj Tsakhia said Tuesday at the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists annual announcement rating how close humanity is from ...
Ban and other members of The Elders — the group's chair and former Irish President Mary Robinson, former Mongolian President Elbegdorj Tsakhia and former Columbian President Juan Manuel Santos ...
Elbegdorj (Mongolian: Элбэгдорж) is a Mongolian personal name. Notable people bearing this name include: Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj (born 1963), President of Mongolia in 2009–2017, Prime Minister in 1998 and 2004–2006; Rinchingiin Elbegdorj (1888–1938), Buryat revolutionary in the early Mongolian People's Republic
Bolormaa met her future husband, Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj, while both were students living in Lviv. [3] The couple married and had their first son, who was born in Lviv. [3] They returned to Mongolia in 1988. [3] Khajidsurengiin Bolormaa worked as a mineralogical engineer for the government-run Central Geological Laboratory of Mongolia.