President Bush showers Mongolian Reds with praise, aid.President George Bush stopped in Mongolia on November 21 during his China trip to praise Mongolia's "democracy" and to drop off $11 million in U.S. aid, the first installment of a larger package still to come. "You are an example of success for the region and for the world," Bush said in a speech to Mongolia's President Nambaryn Enkhbayar Nambaryn Enkhbayar (Mongolian: Намбарын Энхбаяр; born June 1, 1958, in Ulaanbaatar) is the current President of Mongolia. , military leaders, and legislators in the capital of Ulan Batur. "As you build a free society in the heart of Central Asia, the American people An American people may be:
President Enkhbayar is a "former" communist and head of the Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party The Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party (Mongolian: Монгол Ардын Хувьсгалт Нам, , which is the renamed and (supposedly) reformed Communist Party of Mongolia. Red China pretended to grant Mongolia full autonomy in 1990--and the United Nations and the U.S. government (along with the rest of the world's nations) pretend that Mongolia is now truly independent of Beijing's communist control. Over the past five decades, Red China has carried out a systematic program of repression of the Mongols, including the forced transfer of Mongols from their ancestral lands, to be replaced by ethnic Chinese. As a result, ethnic Chinese now outnumber Mongolians in Mongolia by a ratio of five to one. Thousands of the nomadic See nomadic computing. Mongols who live off their herds of sheep and goats continue to be driven from their lands by the central authorities, who cite environmental excuses, such as the need to protect the grasslands from overgrazing overgrazing see overstocking. . |
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