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Mongolian Prime Minister Luusan Sishan Oyun-Erden resigned after losing voting in the Parliament.
Voting following the days of mass protests on corruption allegations – they are fueled by reports in the social media about the lush party of their son and engagement.
Oyun-erden, who took over in 2021, will remain prime minister until the successor is appointed within 30 days.
“It was an honor to serve my country and people in times of difficulties, including pandemic, wars and tariffs,” he said after the vote.
He had to stand up if he did not match the majority, or 64 of the 126 parliament. About 82 legislators took part in a secret newsletter, 44 of which voted for Oyun-Erden, and 38 voted against it.
Hundreds of protesters, many of them, took to the streets two weeks before the vote, demanding the resignation of Oyun-Erden.
In particular, they pointed to his family – especially his son – a clear lush of life, questioning the source of their wealth.
The Mongolians spread on the social networks of the extravagant proposal of the wedding of the son of Oyun-Erden, as well as expensive fashion subjects.
Oyun-Rdene has dismissed corruption allegations, accusing critics of the call for a callous campaign.
According to Transparency International, the caretaker, Mongolia noticed that corruption was deteriorating because Oyun-erden entered into power. Last year, it ranked 114th from 180 countries in the government’s transparency.
The former communist state, which was inflicted between Russia and China, Mongolia moved to democracy from the fall of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s.
Corruption is a sustainable problem. Last year US prosecutors sought to get rid Two apartments in New York former Mongolian Prime Minister Sukhbaators What he allegedly bought with the help of stolen mining funds.
Batald, which served from 2012 to 2015, refused to violate.
In recent years, Mongolia has sought to establish closer ties with the West, counting the United States and European countries within its foreign policy.