Party split In 2010, Enkhbayar established a political party and named it the
Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party. The party received approval to use the previous name of the
Mongolian People's Party (MPP) from the
Supreme Court of Mongolia on 26 June 2011. Enkhbayar himself became the first and only chairman of his party. The MPRP, for much of its decade-long existence, was the primary
third-party force and key
anti-establishment party up until 2021, when the party decided to merge back into the MPP during its hundred year anniversary.
Corruption convictions The
Independent Authority Against Corruption (IAAC) arrested Enkhbayar at the dawn of 13 April 2012. The IAAC stated that it arrested Enkhbayar for questioning in a
graft case involving the illegal privatization of a government-owned hotel because he never showed up for questioning. Over 1000 members of his party, the MPRP, and Enkhbayar's supporters participated in party's organized demonstration demanding Enkhbayar's release on the same day of his arrest. On 4 May 2012, Enkhbayar announced a dry hunger strike demanding his release.
Amnesty International issued a statement demanding the Mongolian authority to respect human rights of Enkhbayar compatible to international standards.
United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon made a phone call to then-President
Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj expressing concern over Enkhbayar's health. Enkhbayar was released on bail on 14 May 2012.
United States Senator
Dianne Feinstein expressed to the
U.S.Senate her pleasure for Enkhbayar's release on bail and said "For any democracy, due process and the rule of law are essential." On 8 June 2012, the
General Election Commission (GEC) refused to register Enkhbayar as a candidate for the
2012 parliamentary elections in the MPRP
party list listed as number one. It stated that the official documents sent from the Prosecutor's Office and
Sükhbaatar District Court of Ulaanbaatar required the rejection of Enkhbayar's application pending the case. However, Enkhbayar and his lawyers argue that the incumbent president, Elbegdorj, who took office in 2009, engineered the corruption case to keep him from running in the coming elections. They claim that the court gave them insufficient time to review the prosecutors' evidence and witness statements. The election authorities' denial of Enkhbayar's candidacy on 6 June, they say, violates his constitutional right to be considered innocent until proven guilty. According to a US-based independent trial observer, the five charges leveled against Enkhbayar seem overblown and unsubstantiated. One accuses him of misappropriating TV equipment that was intended for a Buddhist monastery. Another alleges that he illegally shipped eight copies of his autobiography to
South Korea on a government plane. On 2 August 2012, after a three-day trial, Sukhbaatar District Court convicted Enkhbayar of corruption and sentenced to seven years of imprisonment, three of which was pardoned and then gave four years prison term and fined with over MNT 1.7 billion for misusing state properties and government power. Enkhbayar's sentence was reduced to two and a half year prison term without the fine by the Supreme Court, the highest court in Mongolia. On 1 August 2013, President of Mongolia Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj issued a decree to pardon Enkhbayar thus releasing him from the rest of his jail term effective on the decree date. in 2000 == List of high government/party positions ==