Mongolian Endurance Race condembd by Long Riders Guild

PeterNatt

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Equestrian Exploration and Endurance Leaders condemn world's largest unethical horse race

What is being labelled as the world's longest horse race, has been denounced by an unprecedented alliance of equestrian, endurance and exploration leaders.

At a thousand kilometers, the Mongol Derby would be the largest non-sanctioned endurance race ever attempted. Set to be run this summer in Mongolia, nearly a thousand semi-wild under-sized native horses have been drafted into an effort which deliberately flaunts international endurance racing rules.

"There's no carefully marked course, no catering tent and no support; this is horse racing on a whole new scale. You will change steeds every 40 km so the horses will be fresh. Bleeding kidneys, broken limbs, open sores, moon stroke and a list of dangers longer than your arm stand between you and victory," warns the official race website.

The horse race is being promoted by Tom Morgan, a native of Great Britain whose company, The Adventurists, previously specialized in enticing adventure-hungry tourists into signing up to race junk cars to distant national capitals.

"We don't make any safety arrangements. Our adventures are designed to be just that, so organising a support crew would rather take the edge off things. People are made painfully aware that what they're entering into can be extremely dangerous," Morgan's website cautioned.

Connie Caudill, President of the American Endurance Ride Conference, is one of the many equestrian leaders who have warned that Morgan's Mongol Derby will severely damage the sport and may well lead to horses being ridden to death.

"This will set endurance racing back 50 years," Caudill said, then added, "This isn't an endurance race, it's entertainment that will undermine endurance racing all over the world."

Morgan's company sought advice from The Long Riders' Guild, the world's first international association of equestrian explorers. The Guild warned the tour company against encouraging the twenty-five foreign competitors, all of whom had paid nearly $5,000 for a chance to ride, to attempt the journey, as the Guild's mounted explorers had recently encountered wolf attacks, bubonic plague, rabies, flash floods, foul water, poisoned food, horse theft and personal assault.

"The Adventurists is preparing to embark on an ill-advised equestrian misadventure, one in which your company does not appreciate the many equestrian hardships and dangers being presented to the horses and riders," The Guild informed the tour company.

Regardless of the danger, Morgan is busy promoting what he calls "biggest, baddest equine affair on the planet." He is being assisted by Richard Dunwoody, a former British champion jockey turned equestrian tour guide. Originally hired to present a lecture on racing to the amateur riders, Dunwoody has announced that he will be riding as a contestant in the event.

Because he plans on drafting nearly one thousand native horses into his non-sanctioned race, Morgan sought tactical and equestrian assistance from an unlikely source, the international charity, Mercy Corps.

Operating in more than a hundred countries, with offices in Scotland and Mongolia, the wealthy charity agreed to accept a guaranteed £25,000 in donations from Morgan's riders in exchange for providing the tour operator with access to twenty-five Mongolian herder families and their horses.

"Mercy Corps are delighted to be a part of the first ever Mongol Derby," said Jennifer Adams, the Event Development Coordinator at Mercy Corps, European Headquarters in Edinburgh, Scotland. When asked if this partnership of participation meant that Mercy Corps was in the horse racing business, Adams answered, "I guess you could say that."

During an eight month investigation into the race, Long Riders in New Zealand, Canada, Switzerland, Great Britain, Mongolia and the United States confirmed that neither the Mongolian government, nor the Fédération Equestre Internationale (FEI), the international body assigned to protect endurance racing from exploitation, was involved in organizing the race.

"This is going to be all about the endurance of the rider, as opposed to the horse," said a spokesperson for Morgan's company.

Contestants are riding straight into danger.

"They're providing us with these yellow brick trackers, so we can activate the emergency beacon if our horse is injured and we can't walk it in," one rider said. "The only other time you're supposed to activate the beacon is if you feel your life is in immediate danger. There's only one emergency medical helicopter in all of Mongolia."

Food and water will also be an obstacle during the so-called Mongol Derby.

"We're still looking into the food options," the naïve young contestant told the press. "They're going to give us GPS locations to the wells, where we'll be able to get water, and they don't guarantee that the wells will have water. They want us to be careful because there are packs of wild dogs that surround those wells."

When it was learned that Morgan's race appears to violate the three primary principles of endurance racing, namely no commercial exploitation of the horse, a marked route and confirmed sources of water, the world's largest coalition of riders, explorers and editors launched an international petition asking the Mongolian president to halt the race and urging Princess Haya, President of the FEI, to ban the competitors for life.

Additionally, Britain's Minister for the Horse, Jim Fitzpatrick, has been urged to scrutinize Morgan's non-sanctioned race, and the Charity Commissions in England and Scotland received a complaint asking them to investigate the possibility that Mercy Corps participated in unacceptable behaviour.

Regardless of what happens out on the steppe in August, it is already plain to see that thousands of horse riders, equestrian explorers and endurance riders have banded together in an unprecedented act of solidarity designed to halt Morgan's spectacle.

For more information about the race, and to sign the petition, please visit the Long Riders' Guild Mongol Investigation & Petition

www.thelongridersguild.com/mongolia.htm
 
Done.
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I hope someone puts a stop to it.
 
I've signed it too - I'd heard of it but didn't realise it was like that! It sounds horrendous! Endurance riders are so focussed on caring for their horses and making sure they are 100% fit and healthy and it sounds like this 'race' is the complete opposite
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Here is a link to a news stroy on this subject - but perhaps more poignant is the following comment on the story added by a member of the public.

http://www.oregonlive.com/business/index.ssf/2009/06/mercy_corps_mongolian_horse_ra.html

"I have 15 years experience in Mongolia, traveling with the local horses. My problem with this race is not the issue of horse abuse, nor rider abuse. Mongol ponies are up to the task and frankly, if the the self described "adventurists" suffer bruised bums, broken legs, black death, etc. that's fine with me.

The problem I have this: Are these bored (by their own much trumpted admission), rich (by virtue of the fact that they are paying $200 us or so per day) young riders prepared to explain to the Gobi herder (who takes them in after their horse has run off, their butt cheeks are rubbed raw and they are parched and hungry) that the reason they are "racing" is to alleviate their oppressive and apparently chronic boredom?

Mind you, they are going to be talking with a man and his family who daily face the "challenges" that these bored, upper class adventurists face only for a week or so. They are going to have to look this man in the face and explain that their own lives are so devoid of purpose and meaning that they need to spend the equivalent of this man's annual wage so that they can release themselves, however temporarily, from the ennui that afflicts them. But... it's ok, because hey, we are hitting up our friends and neighbors and raising some money for a CHARITY!! and that makes it all ok. Mercy Corps should be ashamed to be associated with an event that self describes it's project with such ludicrous, narcissistic hyperbole. A "race that makes a roman emperor weak at the knees" and all this biggest, baddest bullshit.

It's yet another case of Mongolia being used as a backdrop for "fantasy" adventures where the landscape, the horses, the people are mere exotic props. Imagine the tables turned and a bunch of rich Mongolian kids (they exist) doing a wild motor rally in souped up Mini's through the hedgerow lanes and motorways of Britain. Do you suppose an event like that would be allowed? But it would be ok because they are donating some money to a charity that feeds homeless people.

Why does this have to be a "race"? That notion is actually antithetical to Mongol tradition ( terms of how you behave when traveling long distances). They do have horse races, but they are very specific in length and age of horse and the jockeys are ALL kids under 10 (for obvious weight reasons)and the horses are conditioned rigorously. A better model would have been a culturally and historically recreation of the post to post system but run as a cooperative experience and it would have INCLUDED YOUNG MONGOLS. But apparently only a RACE can dispel the boredom of the jaded youth of the West.

I am so fed up with the notion that bad behavior in foreing countries is made acceptable because you donate some money to a charity. Do these riders actually know just where the money goes and what it does? Or is it enough to "help poor people"? Isn't it rather like buying an indulgence? If this event involved an additional week in Mongolia, during which the riders with hypenated names worked at building toilets or teaching English or something that actually demanded more of them than the writing of a check, then they just might learn something that would help them alleviate their boredom in a more lasting way. "
 
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