04-06-2025
ULAANBAATAR: Mongolia’s Prime Minister (PM) has resigned after social media photos of his son’s lavish lifestyle sparked an anti-corruption investigation and weeks of mass protests.
Luvsannamsrain Oyun-Erdene, who has denied wrongdoing, lost a confidence vote in parliament on Tuesday.
The viral photos purport to show Oyun-Erdene’s son and the son’s girlfriend flaunting a black Dior shoulder bag and several shopping bags while on their engagement holiday.
Protesters questioned how Oyun-Erdene’s family could afford such luxurious living. Local media reported that the country’s anti-corruption body had been looking into their finances.
The photo of the Dior bag, reportedly posted by the girlfriend, had the caption: “Happy birthday to me”. Another photo purportedly showed the couple kissing in a swimming pool.
The images have been shared on social media and published by local media.
During Tuesday’s confidence vote, 44 of the 88 lawmakers who took part in the secret ballot voted for Oyun-Erdene, while 38 others voted against him. He needed the support of at least 64 of parliament’s 126 members.
“It was an honor to serve my country and people in times of difficulties including pandemics, wars, and tariffs,” he said after the vote.
Hundreds of protesters, many of them young people, had been taking to the streets for two weeks before the vote, demanding Oyun-Erdene’s resignation.
Oyun-Erdene has rejected allegations of corruption, accusing critics of launching a smear campaign against him.
According to Transparency International, Mongolia has seen worsening corruption since Oyun-Erdene came into power. Last year, it was ranked 114th out of 180 countries in terms of government transparency. A former Communist State Sanwiched between Russia and China, Mongolia has been transitioning to democracy since the fall of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s.
Corruption is a persistent problem. Last year, US prosecutors sought to forfeit former Mongolian PM Sukhbaatar Batbold’s two New York apartments that he allegedly bought using stolen mining funds.
What were the accusations?
This year, antigovernment protests began as early as January but the PM faced a new wave of criticism in May stemming from a controversy surrounding his 23-year-old son Temuulen, whom Asia-Pacific commentary outlet The Diplomat reported was recalled from his studies at Harvard University “due to corruption investigations.” Social media reports of Temuulen gifting his now-fiancée luxury items including, according to media, “helicopter rides, an expensive ring, designer handbags and a luxury car” angered the public.
How did Oyun-Erdene respond?
Oyun-Erdene’s office has mainly called the allegations of financial impropriety a “smear” and “completely unfounded.” In a statement to media, the office said that the Prime Minister “makes regular financial declarations annually in line with Mongolian law.” Following demands to resign in May, the PM spoke to local media in defense of his son. Researcher Bolor Lkhaajav reported for The Diplomat that Oyun-Erdene’s son did not ask for financial support from his father and that Mongolia’s Anti-Corruption Agency was looking into the controversy. Oyun-Erdene even reportedly offered to resign without protest if the agency discovered irregularities in his financial statement. (Int’l News Desk)