An estimated 7,000 people, many of them wearing air masks and gas masks underneath thick winter hats, braved temperatures that fell below minus 20 degrees Celsius (minus 4 Fahrenheit). Standing in the city's central Sukhbataar Square, they held black balloons and protest signs. One banner read: "Wake up and smell the smog."
Ulaanbaatar is one of the world's coldest capitals, and more than half of the city's 1.3 million residents rely on burning raw coal, plastic, rubber tires and other materials to stay warm and cook meals in their homes. In impoverished neighborhoods that ring the city, known as ger districts, many herders and others live in traditional round tents without heating, leaving them to burn polluting fuels.
Pollution readings in one ger district Friday were at times nearly 30 times above the levels considered safe by the World Health Organization. Icy winds that whipped through the square during Saturday's protest cleared some of the previous day's pollution.
"The policies our government is pursuing are pretty piecemeal, I would say," Jargalsaikhan said. "They're not part of a development project or a comprehensive program." Mongolia's environment and tourism minister, Oyunkhorol Dulamsuren, said in December that the government spent more than $37 million and international donors $47 million between 2011 and 2015 on measures to cut down air pollution.
But many protesters yesterday said that they didn't have the means to do more on their own. Dorjin Dolgor, a retiree, said she lives on an annual pension of 275,000 MNT ($112). She burns coal in the stove of her house to stay warm.
"To get heaters for my three-room house would cost me one year of my pension, and maybe not even be enough," she said. "That is the real price. And on top of that, we don't know how my electrical bill would be afterward.
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