Chinese police makes arrest on Mongolian soil, deporting prominent
writer - SMHRIC May 11, 2023
http://www.smhric.org/news_720.htm
On May 3, 2023, four policemen with two police vehicles from China came
to the independent country of Mongolia and arrested Mr. Lhamjab Borjigin, a
prominent Southern Mongolian writer in exile, at his temporary residence in the
capital city of Ulaanbaatar. Shortly after the arrest, Borjigin was deported
back to China on the same day.
A week before the arrest, Borjigin notified the Southern Mongolian Human
Rights Information Center (SMHRIC) that the Chinese authorities were harassing
and threatening his family members in Southern Mongolia.
“My family members told me that an army of police and security personnel
are visiting my family and pressuring them to bring me back,” Borjigin said in
the audio message to the SMHRIC. “They are claiming to come to Mongolia with my
daughter and bring me back.”
The SMHRIC immediately contacted the United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees’ (UNHCR’s) regional office in Bangkok, Thailand, and demanded
urgent action to prevent Borjigin from being deported to China. An unidentified
official from the office responded to the SMHRIC by email, asking for
Borjigin’s phone number and email address. After providing Borjigin’s contact
details, the SMHRIC did not receive further communication from the office. The
question of whether the office was able to contact him remained
unanswered.
“Yes, unfortunately, he was brought back to China on May 3. Some of his
family members were also among the dispatchers from China,” a close friend of
Borjigin from Ulaanbaatar told the SMHRIC. “Nothing we can do about it now. All
we can do is publish his books here.”
As a well-known Southern Mongolian dissident writer and the author of
numerous books, Borjigin was sentenced to two years in prison in 2019 for
writing a book entitled China’s Cultural Revolution. In 2021,
following his prison term, he was placed under indefinite “residential
surveillance,” a form of house arrest.
On March 6, 2023, Borjigin managed to escape from China and arrived in
the independent country of Mongolia. According to his testimony to the SMHRIC,
his plan was to publish his three books in Mongolia to inform the world of how
the Chinese colonial regime had established itself in Southern Mongolia and how
the Mongolian resistance had been quashed.
“These are my plans should I be lucky enough to live a few more years in
peace here without being followed, monitored and questioned, until being called
by Karl Marx to join him in heaven,” Borjigin said in the testimony.
This is the fifth major case of the deportation of Southern Mongolian
dissidents in exile from the independent country of Mongolia since 2009. In
most cases, the Chinese authorities sent their police directly to Mongolia to
make their arrests on Mongolian soil. They completed the deportation process in
coordination with the Government of Mongolia.
In 2009, Chinese police dispatchers arrested Mr. Batzangaa, a Southern
Mongolian dissident and Mongol-Tibetan medical school principal, in front of
the UNHCR office building in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. Along with his daughter and
wife, he was deported to China and sentenced to three years in prison followed
by indefinite surveillance.
In a similar case, Chinese police dispatchers recently detained and
interrogated a Southern Mongolian dissident named Adiyaa in Bangkok, Thailand.
Thanks to the urgent intervention of the UNHCR’s regional office, Mr. Adiyaa
was swiftly resettled in Canada shortly after.
As China doubles down on efforts to pressure her neighboring countries
to silence criticism, Mr. Munkhbayar Chuluundorj, a Mongolian citizen, human
rights defender, writer and journalist, was sentenced to 10 years in prison
last year. The charge brought against him was “collaborating with a foreign
intelligence agency to spy against the People’s Republic of
China.” Chuluundorj has been an outspoken critic of China’s human rights
violations in Southern Mongolia and the Mongolian authorities’ unusually cozy
relationship with the Chinese Communist regime.
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