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- <text id=90TT1150>
- <title>
- May 07, 1990: Mongolia:Asia's Gentle Giant
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- May 07, 1990 Dirty Words
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 44
- MONGOLIA
- Asia's Gentle Rebel
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As democracy stirs in this frozen outpost of Stalinism, the
- leadership takes a slow-motion approach to perestroika
- </p>
- <p>By Jaime A. Florcruz/Ulan Bator
- </p>
- <p> Inside a fenced government compound in the heart of Ulan
- Bator, Mongolia's capital, a traditional felt tent, known as a
- ger, rests on the concrete square. Inside the ger stands Mandakh
- Jiguur, 28, an artist who has abandoned his oils and watercolors
- for a higher calling: private enterprise. Spiritedly, he moves
- between the eight tables, pushing sausages, vodka and smoldering
- Mongolian hot pot on his customers. Jiguur heaves a sigh of
- relief that this day the authorities did not arbitrarily shut
- down his bar. "One day they tell you to stand up and start a
- business," says Jiguur. "But the next, they hit you on the
- head."
- </p>
- <p> Call those meddlesome government officials Mongolia's past
- and the enterprising Jiguur the future. The present is just as
- Jiguur experiences it: a country trying, by fits and starts, to
- make a graceful transition from orthodox communism to something
- approximating democracy. Since last December, reform-minded
- Mongolians have been pressuring their leaders for ever faster
- economic and political change. In response, the ruling Communist
- Party has opened Mongolia's doors to foreign investment and
- ceded its monopoly on power, giving rise to more than a dozen
- pro-democracy parties. Activists insist that the changes are
- merely cosmetic. But measured against the intransigence of North
- Korea, China and Vietnam, Asia's other Marxist states, Mongolia
- is a renegade, spearheading the charge from behind the Bamboo
- Curtain toward the more democratic and market-oriented future
- now embraced by Eastern Europe.
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps what surprises most about Mongolia's quiet
- revolution is how peacefully it is unfolding. Mongolia, after
- all, is the homeland of Genghis Khan, who seven centuries ago
- led one of history's most notorious tribes of warriors.
- Twentieth century Mongolian history has not been much kinder.
- Economic stagnation, diplomatic isolation and political
- repression have withered the nation of 2 million since it fell
- into Moscow's orbit in 1921. The most basic commodities are in
- scarce supply--even meat, despite the fact that Mongolia has
- more than six times as many sheep as people. Half the meat
- production is exported in exchange for Soviet goods and loans.
- The exports help repay Mongolia's $5.5 billion foreign debt.
- </p>
- <p> Against that backdrop, the gains of Mongolia's revolution
- seem breathtaking. Prodded by Moscow and local reformers, the
- ruling Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party has gingerly
- embraced shinechiel (renewal), the local version of perestroika.
- Last March, Ulan Bator opened its doors to foreign investment
- after the government approved a law that guarantees unlimited
- and tax-free repatriation of profits for investors and joint
- ventures. The results seem promising. The Gobi Cashmere Factory
- already produces garments for Japanese and European markets, and
- Japanese, European and U.S. traders are talking about joint
- ventures.
- </p>
- <p> As Mongolia's isolation lifts, outside influences seep in.
- English is taught in schools and on television. Western pop
- culture--from rock music to lambada dancing--has invaded the
- cities. And the infectious spirit of Eastern Europe's
- pro-democracy parties is broadcast directly into many Mongolian
- homes, courtesy of Soviet television.
- </p>
- <p> In many respects, the changes speak more of a revived sense
- of nationalism than of a hunger for democracy. The descendants
- of Genghis Khan are rediscovering traces of an identity that was
- systematically blurred during the decades of Soviet domination.
- Mongolian script, abandoned in the 1940s in favor of the
- Cyrillic alphabet, is again being taught. The image of the
- Mongol hero is back in vogue: a nearly completed joint-venture
- hotel is named after Genghis Khan, and his visage adorns the
- label of a local vodka that is bottled for export. An elaborate
- memorial to the warrior will soon be constructed in the capital.
- Meanwhile, the last of the Stalin statues in Ulan Bator has been
- dismantled.
- </p>
- <p> Since December, pro-democracy activists have turned the
- heat on the ruling party with a series of demonstrations. In
- March they won a surprising victory when the Communist Party
- replaced its five-member Politburo with a younger, more
- progressive team and promised to hold multiparty elections for
- a bicameral parliament by this July. The opposition feels those
- changes do not go far enough. At a four-day congress in April,
- the ruling party approved plans for greater freedom for party
- members and rejected the Leninist principle of democratic
- centralism. But after intense infighting, the congress
- re-elected the top party echelon. Last week opposition and
- security forces almost came to blows as 40,000 protesters
- descended on the government palace to demand change.
- </p>
- <p> The opposition faces an uphill sprint. The Communists, who
- have ruled for 69 years, enjoy access to state money, media and
- organizational apparatus. To offset those advantages, six
- opposition parties and groups have agreed to field common
- candidates in the elections. Even if Mongolia's first democratic
- exercise is fair, local and foreign observers in Ulan Bator
- predict that the Communists will win by a comfortable margin.
- Still, it would seem that the days of absolute rule are over.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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