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The protests are believed to be the region's largest in 20 years. Protests occurred every day this past week in the two county seats and Xilinhot, with the largest a march by thousands of Mongolians led by students in uniform on Wednesday in Xilinhot. Hundreds of herders marched in Zhenglan on Friday until they were stopped by police. Accounts differ over whether a clash ensued. Behind the protests is a sense that Mongolian identity is under threat. Their traditional way of life
-- herding sheep and cattle -- has almost disappeared as the grasslands give out to mining, farming and urban sprawl. A coal mining boom is accelerating the degradation, and a standoff between herders and coal truckers precipitated the recent protests. Angry at truckers for driving over their grazing lands, herders blocked a road, and one truck driver struck and killed a herder, Mergen, who like many Mongolians goes by one name. Authorities later arrested two Chinese in the incident. Unlike Tibetans in Tibet and Uighurs in Xinjiang, ethnic Mongolians are a small minority, less than 20 percent of the 24 million people in Inner Mongolia. Many speak little or no Mongolian, having been educated in Chinese school systems.
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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