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Ninjas Battle for Gold in Mongolia's 'Wild West'
reuteurs ^ | Mon Jun 28,10:25 AM ET | By Nick Macfie

Posted on 06/28/2004 7:06:44 PM PDT by Flavius

OGOOMOR BAGA, Mongolia (Reuters) - Heaven meets hell where blue hills lining Mongolia's vast grasslands, untouched for millions of years, have been turned into giant slag heaps.

Multi-story floating dredgers scoop up the beds of newly diverted rivers and, with metallic rumblings straight out of a sci-fi film, crunch and separate the gold-bearing deposits from the debris they disgorge 24 hours a day.

Vast floodplains, above which at night the Milky Way stretches across the sky, are being turned upside down and areas just as big await a similar fate.

Nearby, gold rush towns are rising from the dirt, turning the central part of the land of Genghis Khan into a squalid Wild West.

It is all legal.

But at night, the dredgers are followed by the ninjas –

illegal miners named after the green, turtle-shell-like pans they carry on their backs -- who sift the droppings under cover of darkness and pan them for the gold the dredgers have missed.

The only sign of the ninjas the next morning is the dozens of discarded batteries from their flashlights.

Mongolia, once the center of one of the world's greatest empires, has gold in them thar hills, and foreign companies have been quick to grab a piece of the action.

Some multinationals have tried to clean up the mess they leave behind, but others have done nothing. As for the ninjas, they are doing irreparable damage -- to the environment, to themselves and to the herders living nearby in circular, white tents called "yurts" in Russian and "gers" in Mongolian.

In some places the ninjas simply dig 65-foot holes in the ground, or sift disgorged material left by the dredgers or pan rivers, using a system of secret flashes and calls at night to warn the others of danger or of an approaching official.

Elsewhere they use poisonous mercury to absorb the gold and then boil the mixture, evaporating the mercury, to get at the gold. In some gers, the apparatus sits next to the kitchen stove.

"We have found herders with five to six times the safety limit of mercury in their urine," said D. Jargalsaikhan, chairman of the Mineral Resources Authority of Mongolia.

"The damage the ninjas are doing is a major problem. Also, about 30 percent of small (legal) gold miners do not care about the environment."

HAND TO MOUTH

Nomadic livestock herding of sheep, goats, horses, cattle, yaks and camels, constitutes the core of Mongolia's economy and represents the basis of the nation's cultural traditions.

About 60 percent of the country is covered by grassland while the Gobi desert envelops the South.

The ninjas are herders who lost everything in three years of devastating "zuds," or disasters. Some turned to illegal mining just to survive. Some are making it rich.

Other ninjas are relatives of legal miners holed up in such gold rush towns as Ogoomor Baga, with its dilapidated shacks and central, non-stop disco. Some are legal miners working overtime.

On the central steppe of Zamaar, the ninjas live brazenly in camps of hundreds of gers and traditional pitched tents.

"We can't go in there," said a Mongolian geologist, watching one such camp after he had navigated the mostly dirt roads for five hours from the capital Ulan Bator. "There may be drunks, bad people. We don't want to start a fight."

All was quiet. In the camps there are shop gers, satellite television gers, pool-playing gers and even girlie-bar gers. All surrounded by treacherous holes in the earth, old mines that give way and kill all too often.

In the river, teen-agers and sun-wizened old folk panned the stream, every few minutes coming up to show off a piece of gold the size of a sliver of tooth but sometimes worth a few dollars. Men on tiny horses sat and watched.

"This is not a good business for us," one said. "We are not making money. We are doing this just to survive."

More than 30 percent of the primeval country, nearly half the size of Western Europe, has been licensed for exploration and mining which have taken off as booming neighbor China buys its copper, lead and other minerals.

Gold mining alone, legal and illegal, has become a key driver of the economy, spinning off smaller businesses such as shops, kiosks and bars in gold rush towns and in Ulan Bator.

"In five to 10 years, mining will easily double gross domestic product," said the Mineral Authority's Jargalsaikhan. "Mining will change the whole country. Hopefully for the better."

Robin Grayson, general director of Eco-Minex International, a British-Mongolian gold exploration joint venture, estimates there are about 100,000 ninjas, including families and support services such as shops and bars.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: mongolia; ninjas
something
1 posted on 06/28/2004 7:06:45 PM PDT by Flavius
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To: Flavius

It'd make a good movie.


2 posted on 06/28/2004 7:27:14 PM PDT by myword
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To: Flavius
I liked this part: ""We have found herders with five to six times the safety limit of mercury in their urine..."

This problem will eventually resolve itself.

3 posted on 06/28/2004 7:41:11 PM PDT by Wumpus Hunter (<a href="http://moveon.org" target="blank">Communist front group for Kerry</a>)
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To: Wumpus Hunter

well, i was just thinking how much more paperwork you have to do poison yourself in the states


4 posted on 06/28/2004 7:44:19 PM PDT by Flavius ("... we should reconnoitre assiduosly... " Vegetius)
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To: Flavius

As kids, we used to break open old mercury switches and thermometers then roll it around in our hands. Eventually the blob would get smashed with a hammer and turn into LOTS of tiny blobs that went everywhere.


5 posted on 06/28/2004 8:03:29 PM PDT by Wumpus Hunter (<a href="http://moveon.org" target="blank">Communist front group for Kerry</a>)
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To: Wumpus Hunter

My old science teacher told me they used to play with mercury all the time. Throw it around, flick it at each other, all kinds of stuff. Well, he was about 60 years old, so I guess we'll chalk it up to the incredible ability of the body to handle chemical stress.:)


6 posted on 06/28/2004 8:06:32 PM PDT by Threepwood
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To: Flavius

..wait till the REAL NINJAS hear this...


7 posted on 06/28/2004 8:21:08 PM PDT by skinkinthegrass (Just because you're paranoid, doesn't mean they aren't out to get you :)
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To: skinkinthegrass

i know they are DOOMED


8 posted on 06/29/2004 3:28:01 AM PDT by Flavius ("... we should reconnoitre assiduosly... " Vegetius)
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