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Mongolia’s reindeer herders fear lost identity under hunting ban
By Thomas Peter and Natalie Thomas, Reuters
May. 21, 2018 7:41 pm
TSAGAANNUUR, Mongolia - Erdenebat Chuluu, a nomadic herder, shouts words of encouragement to the reindeer he is riding.
'Chu!, Chu!,” he calls, as he urges the animal out of a cedar wood and onto a plain in the southern reaches of the Mongolian Taiga, a predominantly forested area some 200 km from the nearest paved road.
Once in the open, the beast and its rider gingerly step over fallen trees and navigate creeks of melted snow, seemingly oblivious to a late winter chill.
Chuluu has lived all his life in the centuries-old tradition of his Dukha ancestors, renowned for their reindeer-herding and hunter-gathering skills in the forests of the rugged Sayan Mountains straddling the Russian border.
But the Dukha fear they are losing their identity in the face of a conservation order by the government that bans unlicensed hunting on most of their traditional land.
(Click https://reut.rs/2KHuORW to see a package of pictures.)
Reindeer outdo horses in this steep and snowy terrain and have allowed the Dukha to evade many of the upheavals that have historically afflicted people in the lowlands, from Genghis Khan to Communism.
Chuluu's people, around 280 of them, are spread out across 59 households, about a day's ride from the village of Tsagaannuur.
'It's our will to maintain the tradition of herding the reindeer in the same way as our ancestors did,” Chuluu told Reuters in April.
In 2012, Mongolia's government designated the majority of the Dukha's traditional herding grounds as part of a national park in an attempt to protect an eco-system ravaged in the preceding couple of decades.
During that period, a Soviet-era quota system for hunting, which had provided a living for people like the Dukha and maintained wildlife numbers, broke down. The Dukha and other locals began to aggressively hunt animals like moose and red deer for the Chinese market, seriously depleting their numbers.
Now, the government pays the herders a monthly handout to compensate for the hunting ban, but many Dukha feel they have lost half of their identity.
The hunting tradition has always defined a man in the Taiga, said Chuluu's neighbor.
'It feels like we've lost something because we can't move to whichever area we like in this land, which has been handed down to us from our ancestors,” said Naran-Erdene Bayar, 26.
The head ranger of the National Park, Tumursukh Jal, grew up in the area and knows the Dukha's history well. He insisted they must follow the law.
'It's not about Dukha or Mongolian, it's about people illegally hunting,” he said.
Meanwhile, on the Taiga, herders release hundreds of reindeer from a pen to graze.
After lifting the beams of the hold, the herd pours into the clearing and the animals, snouts nuzzling the snow-covered ground in search of moss, disappear from view as the evening light fades.
(Reporting by Thomas Peter and Natalie Thomas; Additional reporting by Munkhchimeg Davaasharav in ULAANBATAAR; Editing by Ryan Woo and Neil Fullick)
Tsetse, six-year-old daughter of Dukha herder Erdenebat Chuluu, leads a reindeer by the leash as she brings in the herd before nightfall in a forest near the village of Tsagaannuur, Khovsgol aimag, Mongolia, April 18, 2018. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
Smoke rises from the chimney of the family tent of Dukha herder Erdenebat Chuluu in a forest near the village of Tsagaannuur, Khovsgol aimag, Mongolia, April 21, 2018. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
Baigalmaa Munkhbat dresses her six-year-old daughter Tsetse, as her husband Erdenebat Chuluu watches, in their tent near the village of Tsagaannuur, Khovsgol aimag, Mongolia, April 19, 2018. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
Local doctor Davaajav Nyamaa rides a reindeer to visit nomads in the forest near the village of Tsagaannuur, Khovsgol aimag, Mongolia, April 19, 2018. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
Reindeer lick the salt off the coat of a Dukha nomad in the camp of her family in a forest near the village of Tsagaannuur, Khovsgol aimag, Mongolia, April 20, 2018. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
Baigalmaa Munkhbat prepares food for her nomad family in their tent near the village of Tsagaannuur, Khovsgol aimag, Mongolia, April 19, 2018. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
A reindeer of Dukha herder Erdenebat Chuluu stands in front of a white backdrop in a forest near the village of Tsagaannuur, Khovsgol aimag, Mongolia, April 21, 2018. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
A Dukha nomad drives a herd of reindeer in a forest near the village of Tsagaannuur, Khovsgol aimag, Mongolia, April 20, 2018. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
Baigalmaa Munkhbat prepares food for her family in their tent near the village of Tsagaannuur, Khovsgol aimag, Mongolia, April 19, 2018. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
Dukha reindeer herder Erdenebat Chuluu rests on a stick as he travels with his animals to visit neighbours near the village of Tsagaannuur, Khovsgol aimag, Mongolia, April 19, 2018. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
Ethnic Dukha Jargal Gombosed talks with her daughter and granddaughter in their tent in a forest near the village of Tsagaannuur, Khovsgol aimag, Mongolia, April 20, 2018. 'In my day, everything, like rice and flour, were really rare. But now, as long as you have money, you can get anything, any clothes,' Gombosed said. 'Things were different in the past,' she said. 'When I was young we didn't have any such thing as a phone, so you would only hear news when you went down to the village centre. But now people have phones and also TVs.' REUTERS/Thomas Peter
Local doctor Davaajav Nyamaa visits a patient in her family's tent in the Taiga forest near the village of Tsagaannuur, Khovsgol aimag, Mongolia, April 19, 2018. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
Ethnic Dukha nomad Jargal Gombosed holds her grandchild outside her family's reindeer pen in the forest near the village of Tsagaannuur, Khovsgol aimag, Mongolia, April 20, 2018. The pen holds the reindeer herd of the families of four of her children. REUTERS/Thomas Peter