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Assassination of Mexican human rights activist provokes political
crisis
By Peter Daniels
12 November 2001
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The assassination of Mexican human rights attorney Digna Ochoa
last month has focused attention on the continuing threats and
outright terror facing workers and political dissidents in the
country.
Ochoa, 37 years old, was shot in the head on October 19 in
her Mexico City office. No robbery had taken place, and police
found a note near the body threatening the same fate
to other activists. This will happen to another ... this
is not a joke, the message declared.
Ochoa had been threatened with death on many occasions in recent
years, after she took a prominent role in defending jailed Zapatista
rebels as well as two imprisoned environmental activists, Rodolfo
Montiel and Teodoro Cabrera, who have been declared prisoners
of conscience by Amnesty International. Under growing international
pressure, Mexican President Vicente Fox ordered the release of
Montiel and Cabrera on November 8.
The two men, leaders of the Organization of Peasant Farmer
Ecologists from the Pacific coast state of Guerrero, carried out
protests against illegal logging by local political bosses which
was causing widespread deforestation. In retribution, they were
imprisoned in May 1999 on trumped-up charges of marijuana cultivation
and arms possession. They lost several appeals, despite official
admissions that they had been kidnapped and tortured.
Soon after the jailing of Montiel and Cabrera, Ochoa was kidnapped
on the street in broad daylight. In October of that year, she
was attacked in her own home, tied up, blindfolded and interrogated
for nine hours about the Miguel Agustin Pro Human Rights Center
(Prodh), of which she was then director. The attackers opened
a gas cylinder as they left, but Ochoa survived after freeing
herself and escaping.
Ochoa believed her attackers were backed by elements of the
military itself, either from Guerrero or elsewhere. She left Mexico
last year, after one of the numerous threats against her life.
In March 2001 she returned and began her own legal practice.
Mexican President Fox took three days to condemn the assassination
of Ochoa. He spoke out only after numerous foreign officials,
including those from the US State Department and the European
Union, had issued their own statements. The president at first
referred to the case as just one more murder in the capital.
According to a spokesman of Prodh, Fox did not know who
Digna Ochoa was, nor what Prodh was ... his total ignorance makes
it look as if he was governing another country.
Fox, the leader of the right-wing National Action Party (PAN),
took office 11 months ago, ending more than 70 years of rule by
the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI). The new president
promised action against repression and inequality, claiming there
would be an investigation of past police and army abuses.
In the months leading up to the murder of Ochoa, these pledges
led to nothing. Fox was clearly reluctant to undertake a probe
that would show the role of forces within the military and police
apparatus itself in decades of political repression, including
the massacre of hundreds of Mexican student protesters at the
time of the 1968 Olympics, and numerous instances of torture and
killings in the following decades. All the leading bourgeois parties
of Mexico, including the PRI, PAN and the left-nationalist PRD,
have reason to fear where such an investigation would lead as
well as the social forces that could be unleashed by it.
Instead of exposing the roots of police terror, Fox appointed
Rafael Macedo de la Concha, a brigadier general who had been the
chief military prosecutor in the case against Montiel and Cabrera,
as the federal attorney general. Last May Macedo called off the
probe into the earlier attacks on Ms. Ochoa. The Fox government
then claimed that protection orders that had been issued for Ochoa
in 1999 were no longer warranted.
Human rights activists insisted that these actions had encouraged
the killers of Ochoa. Dignas death was the culmination
of a long history of threats and aggression that found no response,
said the Rev. Edgar Cortez, the director of the Prodh.
Barbara Zamora, a lawyer who worked with Ochoa most recently,
said the office received frequent telephone threats. Sometimes
we pick up the telephone and we hear a woman screaming,
she said. Sometime its the sound of a machine gun.
Once it was the theme from The Godfather. In any
case, the message is clear.
A report released last week by the National Network of Civil
Organizations for All Rights for Everyone documents eight examples
of threats against rights workers since Fox took office. The incidents
occurred in the states of Chiapas, Oaxaca, Guerrero, Jalisco,
Tamaulipas and the Federal District of Mexico City.
Ochoa was well aware of the dangers she faced. On August 21,
just two months before she was murdered, she sent an informal
will in the form of an email message to her sister, asking her
to print it out and then delete it from the computer.
I wanted to write you because it is less likely that
our communication would be intercepted, the letter began.
I will not talk about this with you by telephone, and although
I dont want to worry you I want to make certain that you
have my instructions if something happens to be. I ask that you
and Juan Jose [her boyfriend] take charge of my things. He should
take what he needs, and you will see about the rest. With this,
I am not saying that I think I am going to die (bitter herbs never
die), but I prefer to talk about it so that there are no doubts.
Ochoas death was followed by additional threats. An anonymous
note demanded 30 million pesos from the federal government in
order to prevent the murders of five other human rights advocates.
Lawyers for Montiel and Cabrera expressed worries for their safety
after their release.
The death of Ochoa has provoked an international response,
and not only from such organizations as Amnesty International
and Human Rights Watch. Offering advice to Fox the New York
Times, Houston Chronicle and other US papers have warned
the Mexican president that measures are necessary to restore confidence
that his government will put an end to such murders. Most recently
the Washington Post complained that Foxs response
to the assassination was inadequate.
Once Ms. Ochoa was murdered, Mr. Fox did not respond
publicly for three days, the Post wrote. Finally,
he met with human rights groups and set up a civilian commission
to keep an eye on the investigation. But appointing an official
commission is old-style Mexican politics; it wont help much
if, as in the cases of other high-profile Mexican political murders
in recent years, the investigation stalls as it begins to touch
on powerful interests.... [Fox] must ensure that federal officials
and the military cooperate fully with the investigation, especially
if the evidence points to official involvement.
This segment of the US political and media establishment is
worried that the latest developments threaten to destroy the carefully
crafted image of Fox as some kind of reformer on the Mexican political
scene, and the release of Montiel and Cabrera is clearly an attempt
to undo some of the damage. In a statement to the press on November
8 Fox said, With this, we show, by our actions, my governments
commitment to the promotion and observance of human rights in
our country.
The political crisis that surfaced with the October 19 assassination
will not be so easily resolved. Political stability in Mexico
is also being undermined by the deepening worldwide economic crisis.
Foxs political success thus far has owed much to the claim
that his ties to Washington would somehow help the tens of millions
of impoverished Mexicans achieve some measurable improvement in
their conditions of life. But 85 percent of Mexicos exports
are destined for the United States, and the unmistakable signs
of a sharp economic downturn in the US, as well as in Europe and
Japan, will mean even greater unemployment and poverty in Mexico.
See Also:
Mexico:
News & Social Issues
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