Background
Badrakh was born in present-day Davst district, Uvs Province in 1895.
Badrakh was born in present-day Davst district, Uvs Province in 1895.
Blamed for the excesses of the "Leftist Deviation", he was expelled from the Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party Central Committee in 1932. He was arrested in 1937, accused of conspiring to create a separatist Dörvöd region. He was tried and executed in Moscow on July 30, 1941.
He served as minister of finance from 1924 to 1925.
Known as one of the "rurals", he was one of several younger, more radicalized party members from rural areas (others included Jambyn Lkhümbe, Tsengeltiin Jigjidjav, Zolbingiin Shijee, Bat-Ochiryn Eldev-Ochir, and Peljidiin Genden) recruited by the Soviets in the late 1920s to challenge the MRPR "old guard" of Balingiin Tserendorj, Tseren-Ochiryn Dambadorj, and Anandyn Amar. At the Seventh Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party Congress in October 1928, Badrakh was elected one of three secretaries of the Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party Central Committee (a position he held until June 30, 1932) after the rightists under Tseren-Ochiryn Dambadorj were defeated.
He served briefly as First Secretary from December 11, 1928 until January 30, 1929. In 1937 he was arrested on charges of counterrevolution, accused of heading the "Badrakh Group" along with Zolbingiin Shijee that sought to create a breakaway autonomous Dörvöd region in present-day Uvs Province.
He was sent to Moscow, sentenced to death by the Soviet Military Collegium of the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics Supreme Court on July 7, 1941, and executed on July 30, 1941.
He was rehabilitated in 1963.
He was expelled from Central Committee in 1932 for his role in the "Leftist Deviation" in which certain party leaders were blamed for overzealously and prematurely attempting to implement socialist policies of forced collectivization and property confiscation and was named minister of health from 1932 to 1934.
He was elected member of the Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party Presidium (Political Bureau) from 1925 to 1932.