Mongolians vote in shadow of coronavirus

A man with a face mask has his temperature checked as he arrives to vote at a polling station in Ulaanbaatar, the capital of Mongolia. Medical staff were also present yesterday to hand out disinfectant and single-use plastic gloves to voters who were
A man with a face mask has his temperature checked as he arrives to vote at a polling station in Ulaanbaatar, the capital of Mongolia. Medical staff were also present yesterday to hand out disinfectant and single-use plastic gloves to voters who were there to fill out ballot papers. PHOTO: AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

ULAANBAATAR • Mongolians headed to the polls yesterday with a host of coronavirus safety restrictions in place, as debate raged over whether the elections should have been postponed.

The landlocked East Asian country has seen candidates flout lockdown rules during campaigning and thousands of people stranded overseas by closed borders left unable to vote.

A multitude of safety measures were imposed as polling stations opened early yesterday. Voters queued 2m apart to enter, with medical staff checking temperatures, passing out hand disinfectant and masks, and providing single-use plastic gloves to fill out ballot papers.

Ms Tsetsegee Tsetsendalai, 71, the first voter to enter a polling station in the Sukhbaatar district of the capital Ulaanbaatar, said the country was right to go ahead with the election, as she felt the the outbreak was not so serious. "Other countries already organised elections even if there is a pandemic," she said.

Mongolia, with a population of three million, has imposed some of the toughest measures to contain the virus and was among the first countries to close its borders.

About 8,000 Mongolians are currently stranded abroad and protests inside the country calling for their return have been broken up by the authorities on the grounds that they break social distancing rules.

There have only been about 200 reported coronavirus cases in Mongolia - most imported from Russia - and no confirmed fatalities.

"I thought the election should be delayed," said voter Enkhtsetseg Bandi, 39. "However, the state is spending billions to organise this election, so I must participate not to waste our budget."

The country's two main political parties have broken bans on gatherings of more than 30 people by holding big campaign rallies and ignoring social distancing rules.

A number of corruption scandals have erupted in recent years and there is growing anxiety about graft in the young democracy, which ended decades as a Soviet satellite in 1990.

Ms Enkhzaya Sodnomtseren, a 32-year-old mother of two, said she wanted the elections so a fresh round of lawmakers could be brought to power. "I truly believe we must hold the election, no matter what happens," she said. "I was super happy and in a hurry to come here to vote because I want change."

AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on June 25, 2020, with the headline Mongolians vote in shadow of coronavirus. Subscribe