2018–2019 Mongolian protests

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2018–2019 Mongolian protests
DateOctober 2018 – 10 January 2019
Location
Caused by
Goals
  • End to corruption
  • Fresh elections
  • New government
Resulted in
  • Protests suppressed by force

The 2018–2019 Mongolian protests was a series of mass demonstrations and popular protests against the president and the government after a leak which showed scandals and links of embezzlement with parliament speaker and corruption scandals also unleashed. This triggered the popular uprising and plunged the country into the 2019 Mongolian constitutional crisis.

Background[]

Corruption has been tranquil in the country, since mass demonstrations against the results of 2017 Mongolian presidential election. In a 2016 corruption case, many government officials, along with loyal policemen and security forces were found guitly of embezzlement and fraud.

Protests[]

The rallies erupted in September, with serene anger over the government and president. Anti-scandal and anti-corruption demonstrations soon turned into anti-government and worker demonstrations and rallies by journalists and pensioners, students and workers and continued strongly throughout the month of October.[1] In September, the first traces of public anger was put into place as small demonstrations broke out. These demonstrations turned into an uprising demanding for justice and elections.

Further protests[]

In February, the daily protests turned violent, but the danger soon diminished.[2] The unrest was witnessed by hundreds of thousands of others in Ulaanbaatar. The democratic reforms movement was dwindling while the 2019 Mongolian constitutional crisis was taking place. In April and May of 2019, a series of votes was held for a new speaker in parliament.[3]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Thousands protest corruption in Ulaanbaatar". Al Jazeera. 27 December 2018.
  2. ^ "Thousands rally in Mongolia to call for government to step down". Reuters. 30 May 2019.
  3. ^ "Anti-corruption protests force removal of Mongolian politician". Civicus. 3 May 2019.
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