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In the summer of 2012, the Asian Forum for Human Rights and Development and its Mongolian member organization, the Centre for Human Rights and Development, investigated "the situation of human rights defenders ... working on human rights violations in relation to mining activities in Mongolia." The investigators found that herders living near ...
Delivers recommendations on preventing human rights and freedoms violations when using automated processing technology for collecting, processing, and using data without human interventions; Reflects issues on data protection, violations, and enforcement of the data owner’s rights in the annual Report on Human Rights and Freedom in Mongolia.
Dozens of Mongolian protesters marched to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs headquarters in Ulaanbaatar and demanded a reaction against ongoing repression of Mongol rights in China. [37] The leader of the IMPP, Temtsiltu Shobtsood , who lives in exile in Germany, accused China of "trying to suppress" the Mongolian language.
Human rights abuses in Mongolia (1 C, 3 P) W. Women's rights in Mongolia (4 P) Pages in category "Human rights in Mongolia" The following 4 pages are in this category ...
Mongolian authorities said they had created a working group to dialogue with the protesters. [5] It was reported that the government of Mongolia discussed the situation three times and introduced a "special regime" about the state-owned coal company Erdenes Tavantolgoy. The Minister of Economic Development named five former directors of the ...
The Inner Mongolia government under Hu Chunhua tightened security in Inner Mongolian cities, including dispatching People's Armed Police troops to central Hohhot. To address the underlying issues, the government provided compensation to the family of the victim, brought forth tougher environmental regulations, and dismissed the Communist Party ...
After two years under the official moratorium, the State Great Khural formally signed the Second Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. [10] This makes Mongolia abolitionist because under Article 1, paragraphs 1 and 2, of the Covenant, “No one within the jurisdiction of a State Party to the present ...
Govruud Huuchinhuu (Mongolian: Говрууд Хуучинхуу) was a dissident writer and human rights-activist from Inner Mongolia. In January 2011, Huuchinhuu disappeared after leaving a Tongliao hospital in Inner Mongolia. After 2 years of enforced disappearance by the Chinese government, she was placed under house arrest.