Freeze forces Mongolian herders off land - News.MN

Freeze forces Mongolian herders off land

Old News! Published on: 2010.09.22

Freeze forces Mongolian herders off land

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Mongolians are used to severe winters, but last year”s was one of
the coldest in recent history, CNN says in recent report. For 38-year-old
Bayanzul it was just one winter too far. After losing a third of his herd in
the -45 degree temperatures that struck Mongolia last winter, the long-time
herder has decided to give up on the nomadic life and try his luck in the city.


“Last winter was just too hard,” he says as he guides
his herd slowly across the pastureland towards the markets in Ulan Bator, the
country”s capital. “I am going to try to sell everything and get enough
money to buy a small minibus and charge people for rides.”

 

“During the worst of it I was collecting 20 animals, bringing
them inside the tent to keep warm and giving them some grain,” Bayanzul
says. “Then after a few hours I would move them out and bring in a new
lot. It was like this all day, every day and I still lost all 100 of my cows
and over 300 goat and sheep to the cold.”


The United Nations Development Program estimates more than 7.8
million animals — 17 percent of the country”s livestock — died in what is
known as the dzud, a bitterly cold winter which followed a summer drought. It
has become so difficult to make a living on what is left of the devastated
landscape that many of Mongolia”s remaining 800,000 nomadic herders are being
forced to move to urban sprawls in search of work.


Despite a cash-for-carcasses initiative that offers short-term
financial support for those who help clear away the remains of the country”s decimated
herds, the U.N. estimates that around 9,000 households have been left with
almost no livestock at all, and 32,700 have lost at least half of their
animals.


“This disaster was a little bit different from an earthquake
or tsunami where the disaster happens and then you start to rebuild,” says
Shoko Noda, deputy resident representative of the UNDP. “This one
continued, and the disaster came in a gradual phase. There are herders who have
lost their livelihood completely.”


Experts predict that tens of thousands of former herders and their
families will eventually migrate towards growing towns and cities. Many are
expected to end up living in the ger district in the north of Ulaanbaatar, an
unpaved and water-short region that is now home to one quarter of the country”s
2.7 million population, and where unemployment is estimated to run at
approximately 50 percent.


It is not an easy transition for new migrants used to wide open
spaces. “We used to have about 1,000 animals — horse, cow, goat and
sheep,” says 40-year-old Bolormaa. “But we lost most of them in the
2005 dzud and never managed to recover.”


In 2009, having sold their last animal, she moved with her husband
and three children to the ger district in Ulaanbaatar to try to find work. It
was not until June of this year that her husband found a job, as a security
guard at a private bus company where he earns $146 a month. Their 22-year-old
daughter works in a bread factory.


“It is still difficult trying to get used to this life,
having lived all my life as a herder and now having no animals to watch
over,” she says as she sits in the family”s bare yurt with rubbish piled
up outside. They had to pawn most of their possessions to afford to send their
eldest son to university and their youngest to high school. “Life is hard
in Ulaanbaatar and city people don”t like us people from countryside.”


“Unemployment is the main problem for those who switch the
countryside for the city,” says G. Bolormaa, a program officer for Save
the Children in Mongolia. “They cannot get access to jobs. When they lived
in the countryside they are herders; they have been herding for generations.
But when they come to Ulaanbaatar they don”t have the vocational skills that
are needed to get a job. Some get involved in informal work at the black
market, but many just rely on government benefits.”


According to a World Bank report on the ger districts published
earlier this year, government benefits represent 20 percent of the region”s
total income. Of those who found work, almost a third were employed in
low-skilled jobs in the construction and manufacturing industries.

“Those herders who have lost everything have to seriously
decide if they want to stay in agriculture or move on to a different
business,” says the UNDP”s Noda. “We would probably encourage them to
move on to a different business, but nomadic life is in their hearts, so it
isn”t easy for them.”


For herders like Bayanzul, who did not lose their entire livestock
and are thus able to enter the city with some money saved, life may not be so
hard, but finding a new profession and getting used to an urban existence will
not be easy.


“The first year will be hard, I will miss the animals and
countryside,” he says mournfully, as

he looks out over his herd. “But
I can”t go through another winter like the last.”

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