Goyo Tarag: Social media and dairy production in Mongolia collection
Metadata
identifier
c2828cac-ac65-432e-b7df-23f21219a0cc
type
Collection
coverage
Mongolia
description
This is a collection of websites, blog posts, and public social media pages related to industrial dairy production in Mongolia. The collection focuses on Goyo Tarag, a yogurt beverage that was rumored at one point in 2014 to have been produced in China. See the document “The Goyo Tarag Controversy” (item 829a31a2-a84e-459f-b73e-a71f537ce15e) for an analysis of the documents in this collection by Eric Thrift.
SUMMARY: In February 2014, a pair of blurry images taken at the railway station in Ulaanbaatar began to make the rounds of Facebook in Mongolia. These images, taken by a bystander using his mobile phone, purported to show two men next to a train box car, unloading crates of Goyo Tarag – a yogurt drink produced by Orgil Foods, subsidiary of the major Mongolian drinks manufacturer Vitafit. What seemed out of place was that the train had, apparently, just arrived from the southern border: if this was a Mongolian beverage, why was it being unloaded from a train bringing goods imported from China? Given that Mongolia is a nation of nomadic pastoralists with 45 million livestock, it seemed a national affront, and a major food security concern, that milk products should be imported – and from China, of all places! Within two days, the photographs had been “liked”, commented upon, shared, and re-shared by hundreds of Mongolians. Very soon they had been republished by several newspapers and online news sites, where they provoked commentary from an increasingly wide audience. Reactions to the photographs ranged from surprise and shock to anger and distress. While some commenters questioned the authenticity of the photographs, many acknowledged a troubling, yet perfectly credible, explanation: the manufacturers of this beverage had been misleading the public, by having their commodity produced inexpensively in China and falsely labelled to indicate local origin. As interest in the photographs spread, mainstream news outlets began to report on them widely.
subject
Mongolia
dairy
nationalism
social media
date
2014
language
Mongolian