In Mongolia, Kerry seeks closer ties with democracy ‘oasis’

Published June 6, 2016
ULAANBAATAR: US Secretary of State John Kerry shoots a bow and arrow as he participates in a ‘Naadam’ ceremony, a competition which traditionally includes horse racing, wrestling and archery in Mongolia 
on Sunday.—Reuters
ULAANBAATAR: US Secretary of State John Kerry shoots a bow and arrow as he participates in a ‘Naadam’ ceremony, a competition which traditionally includes horse racing, wrestling and archery in Mongolia on Sunday.—Reuters

ULAANBAATAR: Cultivating closer ties in this land of Genghis Khan lore and traditional yurts, US Secretary of State John Kerry on Sunday tried his hand at archery, sampled curdled cheese and watched ancient wrestling, all the while hailing Mongolia as a modern “oasis of democracy” in its neighbourhood.

For Mongolia, sandwiched betw­een undemocratic China and increa­singly authoritarian Russia, the des­ire for deeper relations was mutual.

Kerry’s stop in this nation of three million people included heaps of praise for its unlikely democratic story. Parliamentary elections next month will be the seventh since 1990, when this vast territory of grassy steppe and nomadic herders shook off its status as a Soviet satellite state.

But the top American diplomat also pushed for greater transparency in Mongolia, a sensitive issue given the foreign scramble for its rich resource deposits and questions about how revenue is being shared among the country’s many impoverished citizens.

In March, hundreds of protesters gathered for a rare demonstration in the capital’s central square, demanding parliament be dissolved and a new government formed.

Nevertheless, mining giant Rio Tinto announced last month the next stage of a multibillion-dollar gold and copper mine that had become a symbol of the tension.

The government is expected to finalise a transparency agreement with the US in coming weeks, Kerry said. Doing so, he said, will help attract foreign investment and boost an economy expected to shrink slightly this year amid sinking commodity prices and weakened demand from China. “Mong­olia has made remarkable progress for a young democracy,” Kerry told reporters.

He credited it for contributing troops to Afghanistan and Iraq, helping even younger democracies in Kyrgyzstan and Myanmar in their transitions, and being a “responsible global citizen”.

Sunday also included fun and games. After lunching with Mongolia’s Harvard-educated president, Elbegdorj Tsakhia, Kerry attended a “naadam”, a competition with archery, horseback riding and wrestling.

The scene in the verdant fields outside Ulaanbaatar, accompanied by an orchestra playing triumphal music, illustrated Mongolia’s rich cultural heritage. The games come from the nomadic tribes which spread from this territory across Asia, the Middle East and Europe, at one point amassing the largest land empire in human history.

First came the wrestling: Men in slips, chest-less tunics and leather boots hurling each other to the ground, while spectators sipped sour-flavoured, fermented mare’s milk.

Then, Kerry fired two arrows at a target 75 metres away. He missed, but acquitted himself decently.

Moments later, horseback riders sprinted to the nearby finish line of their race. The festivals usually last several hours; Sunday’s version was condensed to 45 minutes.

Before Kerry, Hillary Clinton visited Mongolia as secretary of state in 2012.

Vice-President Joe Biden travelled here in 2011 and Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel stopped by three years later, all to support what the US calls Asia’s “plucky democracy”.

Wanting to safeguard its sovereignty, Mongolia has been reaching out to Washington as part of its “third neighbour” policy.

The approach is somewhat similar to several south-east Asian nations developing friendlier relations with Washington because they feel threatened by China’s rising military and economic might.

Kerry, who announced a $2.5-million democracy programme targeting Mongolia’s young leaders, said the two countries shouldn’t be defined by their geographical separation. “When it comes to our hopes, our aspirations for our people,” Kerry said, “we really couldn’t be closer.”

Published in Dawn, June 6th, 2016

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