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The Great State Mural - Mongolia Portrayed

The Great State Mural - Mongolia Portrayed

By: Hosts: Dolgion Aldar Julian Dierkes and Anand Tumurtogoo
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The Great State Mural: Mongolia Portrayed — is a biweekly podcast exploring the current state of social, political, and economic affairs in Mongolia, along with deeper insights and critical analysis of the issues shaping the country. Three Mongolists:Dolgion Aldar (sociologist), Julian Dierkes (sociologist), and Anand Tumurtogoo (journalist), sometimes with guests, discuss and talk about the issues that shape Mongolia. You can find more information about the podcast on Agulamedia.com/podcast And you help support our podcast on https://buymeacoffee.com/greatstatemural2026 Hosts: Dolgion Aldar, Julian Dierkes, and Anand Tumurtogoo Political Science Politics & Government
Episodes
  • Defamation, Repealed — Defamation, Reloaded
    Jun 10 2026

    Mongolia's Parliament repealed Article 13.14 — the criminal defamation clause that haunted the country's journalists for years. A victory for press freedom? Not so fast.

    Duuya Baatar, founder and chairperson of the Nest Center for Journalism and Innovation Development and founder of the Mongolian Fact Checking Center, joins us to explain why the repeal is only a beginning. The numbers tell the story: between 2020 and 2024, more than 2,000 cases were opened under 13.14. Only 5% ever reached a court. Just 0.3% ended in a guilty verdict. The other 99.7%? Journalists dragged from police station to police station, district to district — too busy defending themselves to do their jobs. Intimidation by procedure. SLAPP, Mongolian style.

    And 13.14 was never the only weapon. Over 100 Mongolian laws regulate media or information in some form. Clauses 17.6 and Provision 19 are already being deployed against newsrooms. Now Parliament wants a replacement defamation law — one that defines AI-generated content as false information, grants special protection to public officials who simply deny the facts, threatens whistleblowers with disqualification from office, and covers even what you say out loud in a meeting or a classroom. A boy was already detained for making a meme.

    So what happens when a Press Freedom Bill regulates more than it frees? When the Constitutional Court hands civil society its strongest legal tool in decades, can advocates use it before lawmakers write the next sleeping provision? And why are Mongolia's politicians so afraid of criticism in the first place?

    The law is dead. What comes to replace it may be worse.

    If you have suggestions for our show, please get in touch at info[at]agulamedia.com

    And if you're a supporter at Buy Me a Coffee, buymeacoffee.com/greatstatemural — thank you for keeping the show going.

    Three Universals: The Three Sins of the State

    • The gossipers of the khashaa have sinned.
    • The bearers of truth have sinned.
    • The writers of posterity have sinned.



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    1 hr and 3 mins
  • Mongolian People's Party Civil War 2.0
    May 27 2026

    On May 16th, Prime Minister Uchral Nyam-Osor dismissed Ulaanbaatar Mayor Nyambaatar Khisgee, citing his failure to control surging beef prices and alleged corruption in the Tuul Highway construction project. Nyambaatar fired back, saying that the charges are fabricated, the dismissal is political, and Uchral only has his job because he took away Oyun-Erdene's election victory. He vowed to fight until he ripped the three veins from his lungs.

    We break down what's really happening inside the MPP. Is this a legitimate anti-corruption move — or a factional purge? Who actually controls the party's money, and what does that mean for the 2028 elections?

    And if you're a supporter at Buy Me a Coffee, buymeacoffee.com/greatstatemural — thank you for keeping the show going.

    Keywords: Mongolia | MPP | Ulaanbaatar | Mongolian politics | Mongolia's Democratic Party | Inflation | budget deficit | Strait of Hormuz

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    51 mins
  • Six Headlines for the month of May
    May 23 2026

    The Democratic Party elects a former finance minister — once imprisoned on money laundering allegations tied to the Oyu Tolgoi deal — as their new General Secretary, and possibly their presidential candidate for 2027. Parliament debates holding hearings on the Epstein files, with two former Mongolian presidents named in the documents. A government ministry posts an AI-written condolence statement full of factual errors about a beloved writer, the minister deflects all blame, and the person who hit "post" loses their job — Mongolia's first documented firing over AI use. A 19-year-old conscript soldier dies in a hazing incident, the latest in a long pattern the military cannot seem to stop. A landmark Constitutional Court ruling against a criminal defamation law is being quietly replaced by something journalists say could be even worse. And Prime Minister Uchral fires the mayor of Ulaanbaatar in a very public market visit — a move that could signal the next round of civil war inside the Mongolian People's Party.

    If you have suggestions for our show, please get in touch at info[at]agulamedia.com

    And if you are a supporter of us at Buy Me a Coffee, The Great State Mural, you can access bonus content and help keep this show going.

    Host: Anand

    Keywords: Mongolia | Democratic Party | AI government | press freedom | military hazing | Ulaanbaatar mayor | Mongolian People's Party

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    12 mins
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