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Recently, Mongolia, known as the "steppe herder's paradise", has been hit hard by the worst snowstorm in recent years. The wind was blowing, the snow was flying, the earth was frozen, and the pace of people's lives was forced to slow down or even stagnate. The relentless snowstorm has severely affected the lives of many herders in most parts of Mongolia.
Mongolia is a country where animal husbandry is the pillar industry, and people live a nomadic life on vast natural pastures and fertile livestock. But this year's white demon has relentlessly invaded, covering this paradise with its cold and merciless snowflakes. The herders' homes, the meadows where they live, are covered in snow, making it impossible for people's livestock to forage for food and drink.
The faces of the inhabitants who were drenched in the cold wind were full of hope and anticipation. The blizzard has already wreaked havoc on Mongolia's infrastructure and transportation, with 147 vehicles and 582 herders trapped in the huge ice and snow. These people, as well as the vehicles, survive in the cold atmosphere, and their situation is more dangerous than ever.
However, life always has to go on, and even if it is difficult, the pace of survival cannot be stopped. In this regard, Mongolia** and relevant agencies are already urgently launching relief programmes. The focus of their rescue efforts is to secure the trapped people and vehicles, and at the same time to provide them with much-needed supplies such as food, fuel, and feed for livestock. This sincere relief material has already begun to be transported to Sukhbaatar and other disaster areas, trying to solve the people's living problems.
But for those herders who make a living from grazing, they are increasingly afraid of the problems that the snow may bring. More than eighty percent of the herders' land, their homes, is covered in snow, which directly means that animal husbandry, the basis of their survival, is under dangerous threat. When their pastures are covered with heavy snow, their livestock cannot eat grass or drink water, and they can only witness their livestock die of disease, then I think no one can know what kind of journey and outcome awaits them in the future.
In the face of such a powerless and inescapable disaster, the people of the Mongolian steppe still have a glimmer of hope that can ignite hope. They saw the unity of society, the assistance they provided to the people affected by the disaster, and the warmth of human care. We still look forward to, pray that God will bless Mongolia, and that people can come out of this snowstorm as soon as possible, return to their peaceful lives, and return to their familiar paradise.