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Mass protests and riots began in the Mongolian capital Ulaanbaatar on 4 December 2022. The reason for the protest was a corruption scandal involving the theft of $12.9 billion worth of coal. Mongolian authorities had met with the protesters and promised to investigate the affairs.
The 2021 Mongolian protests were mass demonstrations and a nationwide strike that culminated into the fall of the prime minister Ukhnaagiin Khürelsükh after demonstrators took to the streets in their thousands, protesting the government's response to the COVID-19 pandemic in Mongolia between 20 and 22 January 2021.
A four-day state of emergency, the first in Mongolia's history [7] was declared at by the Mongolian President, effective 11:30 p.m. on 1 July. [6] The state of emergency placed and a ban on the sale of alcohol, authorized police to use force to stop the protesters, and prevented television broadcasts outside of those made by state-run stations.
The 2020 Inner Mongolia protests was a protest caused by a curriculum reform imposed on ethnic schools by China's Inner Mongolia Department of Education.
Protests also occurred in the East Ujimqin Banner. At this point the themes of the protest had evolved from the death of an individual to collective grievances over the ecological destruction of Inner Mongolian grasslands and the integrity of the homeland of the ethnic Mongols. On May 26 the protests spread to the Bordered Yellow Banner. [4]
As schools around the globe prepare for a new term amid the coronavirus pandemic, ethnic Mongolians in China have staged rare protests over a plan to remove the Mongolian language from parts of ...
The interview suggested that the Soviet Union might sell Mongolia to China in order to raise money. [10] [20] On 2 January 1990, Mongolian Democratic Union began distributing leaflets calling for a democratic revolution. [21] On 14 January 1990, the protesters, having grown from three hundred to few thousands, met on square in front of Lenin ...
5 December - 2022 Mongolian protests [2] Disasters. 2022 Mongolian wildfires; Sport. 2022 Judo Grand Slam Ulaanbaatar [3] Mongolia at the 2022 Winter Olympics;