Mongolian riot police maintain calm
AP , Ulan Bator: Jul 4 2008
Made Popular Jul 4 2008
417ed5ba c137 4a0a a032 d0e26a6beedc

Police and soldiers in riot gear patrolled downtown sections of Mongolia’s capital Friday, the final day of a four-day state of emergency declared following post-election riots that left five people dead and 220 hurt.

Military vehicles were withdrawn from the city’s streets Thursday, but the smell of smoke hung in the air over charred buildings that were torched by angry protesters Tuesday.

“Life is steadily getting back to normal,” Justice Minister Munk-Orgil said at a briefing Thursday night. “The situation has stabilized dramatically.”

More than 700 people remained in detention for questioning over the violence _ the worst since the landlocked Asian nation shook off communism 18 years ago.

The rioting followed an announcement Tuesday that the ruling Mongolian People’s Revolutionary Party had retained its parliamentary majority in Sunday’s election.

Thousands of protesters clashed with police as they mobbed the headquarters of the MPRP and set it on fire. The mob, mainly composed of young men, also attacked the General Election Commission, ransacked and torched a nearby cultural center, and looted a duty-free liquor store.

The state of emergency _ which ends at midnight Friday _ also included a suspension of all TV channels except for the state broadcaster and a ban on alcohol sales.

Opposition parties have alleged fraud in the election, although the MPRP was leading in surveys before the election and independent electoral observers have said they saw no signs of systematic fraud. The national election commission has until July 10 to announce final results.

Calling the riot a “horrendous act of barbarism and vandalism,” Munk-Orgil said the theory of a government conspiracy was the “wildest allegation I’ve ever heard in my life.”

At the cultural center, the smell of burned wood and plastic was still heavy in the air. Every office in the building, which housed an art gallery, concert hall and numerous offices, had been broken into and looted.

Munk-Orgil said authorities will carry out a thorough review of police behavior and tactics. Officers used tear gas, rubber bullets and water cannons to beat back rioters wielding bricks and iron rods, although it wasn’t clear how the five victims died.

According to preliminary results of the election that focused on how to share the country’s mineral wealth, the MPRP _ former Communists who governed the country when it was a Soviet satellite _ won 46 seats in the 76-seat parliament. The MPRP has long been dogged by allegations of corruption and is unpopular in the capital.

The government says per capita income is $1,500 a year in the country of about 3 million people spread across an area about three times the size of Spain.

Add Images and Videos
Close X
Recommended Tags or Keywords
Search by Tags or Keywords
Selected Media ( You can Upload only Six media )
Manual Upload
Sorry, no media found for this combination of tags. Try to search minimum number of tags at once
Add your Comment