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- Add some more ideas of your own and then skim-read the article to find the answers. How many words connected to gold can you think of in two minutes Write them in the box below.
- Jonathan Watts in Ogoomor Wednesday October 10, 2007
Add some more ideas of your own and then skim-read the article to find the answers. How many words connected to gold can you think of in two minutes? Write them in the box below. What can we make from gold? e.g. watches What else is gold used for? e.g. dental fillings Gold Mongolia mine machine human rights soldier policemen bowl newspapers thief mother goat smuggle poverty nomad South Africa jewellery murder nugget shell wealth museum arrest turtle art 229 Prospectors and ‘ninja’ miners rush to the east’s El Dorado Central Asia’s gold fever brings rapid economic growth as well as pollution and violence Jonathan Watts in Ogoomor Wednesday October 10, 2007 Enkhmaa – a middle-aged mother and illegal gold miner – explains why she is afraid to go out on the street with a green plastic bowl. Three days ago, she says, the Mongolian police beat and imprisoned her for walking too close to a foreign-owned mine. “They chased after me in a car. When they caught me, they dragged me inside, they hit me on the face, pulled my hair and beat my leg with a truncheon,” she says. Ogoomor, where Enkhmaa lives, is probably the only town in the world where the police might arrest and beat you for carrying a bowl. It is a bizarre side effect of a Mongolian gold rush that is causing problems between nomadic miners and foreign companies. Ogoomor is Mongolia’s Wild West, a dusty town of miners and nomads, tents and wooden shacks, karaoke discos, internet cafes and police cells. From Ulan Bator, it is a seven-hour drive across vast plains inhabited only by a few nomads and their herds of sheep and goats. The town did not exist 20 years ago, but reports of giant nuggets in the nearby hills started a gold rush that attracted several thousand prospectors – legal and illegal. The area around Ogoomor has been called the Mongolian El Dorado. The town is located in the Zaamar valley, where geologists estimate, there is at least 100 tonnes of gold. Russian and local firms have bought up concessions to mine the land. Until recently, thousands of Mongolians searched illegally through the earth for small pieces of gold missed by the mining companies’ giant machines. To do this, they used green plastic bowls, which they carry on their backs like a shell. This appearance gives them their nickname – ‘ninja’ – after the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles cartoon. Many were former nomads, but now the gold rush has brought students, vets and taxi drivers from Ulan Bator. They have joined the ninjas, not just in Ogoomor but in other gold towns across the country. Today, it is estimated that there are between 30,000 to 100,000 people searching for gold in these areas. This has created a huge black market for gold – most of it is probably smuggled across Mongolia’s 3,000 mile border with China. For years, the ninjas were tolerated. In Mongolia, three-quarters of the 2.9m population live on less than $2 a day, and so searching for gold was a way to ease poverty and unemployment. But a Russian mining company asked for new security measures last year after thousands of ninjas invaded one of its mines, beat the guards, destroyed equipment and stole gold. Arrests are now common, local people say. “We live in constant fear,” says Amarjargal. “We can’t even take a green bowl onto the street, and if we have dirty clothes, or muddy shoes, the police arrest us.” “It is hard to find any family that hasn’t had someone arrested,” said an elderly woman called Sunjee (most Mongolians only use one name). “The police have taken people younger than 16 and older than 60.” When the ninjas search for gold they are stealing. The areas are the property of the Russian concession holders so the arrests are legal. But the police crackdown is frightening the residents who say they are pulled from their beds at night, chased as they walk down the street or arrested at checkpoints without any real evidence against them. Visitors to Ogoomor have been shocked at the changes in Mongolia, which is known as Asia’s most democratic nation. But this is not a black- Download 7.3 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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