For his role in a number of noteworthy military victories, Ja Lama was given the high religious and noble titles of Nom-un Khan Khutukhtu and
khoshuu prince Tüshe Gün, respectively, by the
Eighth Jebtsundamba Khutukhtu. Moreover, the victories sealed Ja Lama's reputation as a warlord and as a militant Buddhist monk. He installed himself as the military governor of western Mongolia, tyrannizing a huge territory through a reign of fear and violence. A separatist state for Oirats was being built by Ja-Lama around Kobdo. Ja-Lama and fellow Oirats from Altai wanted to emulate the
original Oirat empire and build another grand united Oirat nation from the nomads of western China and Mongolia. Prophecies had been circulating about the return of Amursana and the revival of the Oirats in the Altai region. In February 1914, Ja Lama was arrested by Siberian
Cossacks on the orders of Russian consular officials in Khovd. The consulate had received numerous complaints from nobles in the Khovd region who disapproved of Ja Lama's autocratic behavior and despotic practices. Ja Lama was imprisoned in
Tomsk for about a year and later moved to
Irkutsk. In 1916, Ja Lama returned to his native Lower
Volga region then reentered Mongolia in the summer of 1918. Ja Lama refused to recognize the authority of the
Bogd Khan and the government immediately issued a warrant for his arrest. Ja Lama, however, managed to evade Mongolian authorities, and established himself in a retreat in the
Black Gobi, on the border between Mongolia and the Chinese provinces of
Xinjiang and
Gansu. From there, he recruited followers and extorted or robbed passing caravans. Ja Lama gained a lucrative amount of gold and silver after looting a Tibetan caravan of fifty merchants. In the
Zasagt Khan aimag opium was cultivated by Chinese workers who were employed by Ja Lama in 1918. Ja-lama murdered all the members of a delegation sent by Baron
Roman von Ungern-Sternberg to
Lhasa in 1920. Ja-lama was apparently found to be a disillusionment by Ungern who had been an admirer, only to allude to him by insults after actually entering Mongolia. == Death ==