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Mongolia PM resigns amid protests over his son’s lavish way of life


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Getty Images Mongolia Prime Minister Luvsannamsrain Oyun-ErdeneGetty Pictures

Luvsannamsrain Oyun-Erdene is underneath fireplace over his household’s alleged lavish way of life

Mongolian prime minister Luvsannamsrain Oyun-Erdene has resigned after dropping a confidence vote in parliament.

The vote adopted days of mass protests over corruption allegations – fuelled by social media posts about his son’s lavish party and engagement.

Oyun-Erdene, who took workplace in 2021, will stay as caretaker PM till a successor is appointed inside 30 days.

“It was an honour to serve my nation and other people in instances of difficulties, together with pandemics, wars, and tariffs,” he stated after the vote.

He needed to stand down as he fell in need of a majority, or 64 of the 126-seat parliament. Some 82 lawmakers took half within the secret poll, 44 of whom voted for Oyun-Erdene, whereas 38 voted towards him.

A whole bunch of protesters, a lot of them younger individuals, had been taking to the streets for 2 weeks earlier than the vote, demanding Oyun-Erdene’s resignation.

Particularly, they pointed to his household’s – particularly his son’s – obvious lavish way of life, questioning the supply of their wealth.

Mongolians have circulated on social media an extravagant wedding ceremony proposal by Oyun-Erdene’s son, in addition to costly style gadgets.

Oyun-Erdene has rejected allegations of corruption, accusing critics of launching a smear marketing campaign towards him.

AFP via Getty Images People protested against Oyun-Erdene at Sukhbaatar Square in Ulaanbaatar last month.AFP through Getty Pictures

Individuals protested towards Oyun-Erdene at Sukhbaatar Sq. in Ulaanbaatar final month.

In response to Transparency Worldwide, a watchdog, Mongolia has seen worsening corruption since Oyun-Erdene got here into energy. Final 12 months, it was ranked 114th out of 180 international locations by way of authorities transparency.

A former communist state sanwiched between Russia and China, Mongolia has been transitioning to democracy because the fall of the Soviet Union within the early Nineteen Nineties.

Corruption is a persistent drawback. Final 12 months, US prosecutors sought to forfeit former Mongolian PM Sukhbaatar Batbold’s two New York flats that he allegedly purchased utilizing stolen mining funds.

Batbold, who served from 2012 to 2015, denied wrongdoing.

In recent times, Mongolia has sought to construct nearer ties with the West, counting the US and European international locations as a part of its “third neighbour” overseas coverage.