63-year-old
herder Badamjarav and her 24-year-old daughter Oyungerel inside
their traditional ger home (p8902)
Badamjarav,
standing by the carcasses of dead animals, tells Maj. Boldbaatar
of the Civil Defence Emergency Commission about the herders'
hardships (p8903)

Maj Boldbaatar listens to the story of herder husband and wife,
Handsuren and Dashnymjil (p8900)

Horses forage vainly for food under the snow. There is little
grass left after four years of drought and bitterly cold winters
(p8904)

The Lhamjav family, all of them deaf, are even more isolated
that other herders because of their disability (p8906)
|
Mongolia's herders threatened again
by cruel winter
21 January 2003
by France Hurtubise, in Bolgan province, Mongolia
For many, the steppes of Mongolia
are among the most stunning places in the world. But look closely,
and they reveal a tale of bitter hardship.
Mongolian herders, who for centuries have lived off both livestock
and the land, are struggling to survive. For the fourth successive
winter, blizzards, heavy snowfalls and extremely low temperatures
have followed severe summer drought. Now the livelihoods of hundreds
and thousands of herders are threatened.
As many as 665,000 people in 17 of Mongolia's 21 provinces are affected
by the disaster - or dzud. The coming months will be severe: fodder
to sustain animals through the winter has largely gone, and the livestock
will have no access to pastures until the snow melts.
Badamjarav had to walk 17 km to the nearest town for help. She borrowed
a hundred bales of hay to feed her 20 goats, cows and single horse.
She can only hope that it lasts until the end of April.
The 63-year old widow and her 24-year-old pregnant daughter Oyungerel,
are one of five herder families living on the hills of Khar Boekhiin
Davaa, in Bulgan province.
Badamjarav left the neighbouring province of Arhangai in the 1970s
in response to a government invitation to help build the new city
of Erdernet. The whole family moved and her husband was employed at
the iron factory. But when he died in the 1980s, they had no choice
but to return to herding.
Every year, she sees her herd getting smaller. Last autumn, she was
forced to slaughter her sheep as they were too weak and would probably
have not survived the winter. But still she remains hopeful: "Even
if we don't have many animals, we have a good life, we just need to
save those we have left," says Badamjarav. But that is becoming
much harder to do with each disastrous year.
Herders are helplessly watching their entire herds slowly die. The
animals, already weakened by the summer droughts, are thin. With little
fat or meat left on their bones, an estimated 2.4 million are expected
to die in the coming months. Frozen bodies already litter the countryside
after around 24,000 animals perished in the first two weeks of January
alone.
"This spring, the situation is likely to be worse. The herders
won't have anything left to feed their animals," warns Major
Boldbaatar of the Civil Defence Emergency Commission. "If the
animals are weak, they won't reproduce. In the mid- to long-term,
that means the end of the herds."
Some herders, like Badamjarav's new neighbour, Handsuren, have migrated
in the hope of finding better pastures. She arrived from Bayanhongor
province in the autumn of 1999.
"Life is so hard, and it will be just as difficult in the future,
because our animals are dying out and we depend on them for a living.
We have no other profession," says the 67-year-old, who thought
he was moving to a better life.
Three summers of drought have left little grass under the thick layer
of snow and withered the crops used for winter fodder. In just one
year, he has seen his herd reduced from 350 cows, sheep and goats
to a meagre 60 animals. Ewes have become too weak to nurse their lambs,
so the herders are taking them inside their 'ger'- the traditional
felt home - and are feeding them powdered milk.
Handsuren's wife, Dashnymjil, worries for the future of her children.
"We can't do anything but face the facts and get used to the
situation. I think I personally will be able to adjust to what happens,
but our children's lives will become dire. My son and daughter have
no profession," she says.
In the face of a fourth disastrous winter, the International Federation
has launched an appeal for 2.8 million US dollars to assist 115,000
herders. The Red Cross assistance throughout the 17 affected provinces
will provide supplementary food, warm clothing for children and boots
for adults. Mentally and physically exhausted by their experience,
it is those herders who have been rendered especially vulnerable by
the dzud that will be helped.
In Orkhon, one of counties in Bulgan province, all members of the
Lhamjav family are deaf. Only Galina, the granddaughter, knows how
to read and write. "It is very hard to make contact with people
because of our handicap," writes Galina. "Animals have been
dying. We have very little money, we are running out of food."
The whole region gets very cold at night, with temperatures dropping
to as low as minus 45 degrees Celsius. There has been more snow and
more frequent snowstorms than in previous years.
In some areas, such as Buregkangai county, vehicles have not been
able to reach remote herder populations. Between 50 and 60 per cent
of the people here have been cut off since mid-December.
For many, the only solution is to move to already sprawling urban
areas. Unskilled, they may find temporary reprieve in working for
someone else. Ganbat, who suffers mental illness, receives a monthly
pension of 10,000 togrop (US$ 9). He and his wife have lost their
only cow, and now live in the county's main town. The only way they
survive is by occasionally taking care of another family's animals.
"We get some wheat flour and rice and some little things for
taking care of these animals when the owner goes away, and that is
how we get some food to eat now," says Naraa, Ganbat's wife.
"But in future, our life is going to be quite difficult because
we have no animals of our own," she adds, with a touch of shame.
The loss of this traditional way of life has been accompanied by a
significant rise in depression and mental illness among former herders.
Related links:
Mongolia: appeals,
updates and reports
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