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Mexican government steps up repression in Oaxaca
By Rafael Azul
16 November 2006
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The Mexican city of Oaxaca is under police occupation. Government
security forces are engaging in a dirty war of arbitrary
detentions and disappearances reminiscent of the operations carried
out in the 1970s.
Since the Federal Preventive Police (PFP) invaded and occupied
the city on October 29, more than 40 leaders and members of the
Popular Assembly of Oaxacan Peoples (APPO) have been arrested,
140 others have been detained and 39 have disappeared, including
teenage youth. Brutality against protesters and teachers is on
the rise. Disingenuously, PFP commanders claim that the current
wave of detentions has nothing to do with repression against Oaxacan
opponents of the governor, but is merely in response to common
crimes. In addition to the PFP, paramilitary squads linked to
Governor Ulises Ruiz and his Institutionalist Revolutionary Party
(PRI) are involved in the detentions and disappearances. Following
the initial police operation, masked police were seen doing house-to-house
searches in neighborhoods most supportive of APPO. People who
have been released have reported beatings and torture. Some of
those still in detention are as young as 13 years of age. Arrest
orders have been issued for the entire APPO leadership.
The Mexico City daily La Reforma indicated last week
that 16 have been killed at the hands of police or paramilitary
squads since June, including Indymedia reporter Brad Will,
who was shot on October 27 together with two protesters.
PRI thugs who brandished weapons and shot at barricaded teachers
and APPO members during the weeks before the government assault
have been emboldened by the presence of the PFP. Teachers throughout
the state describe being accosted and threatened by PRI paramilitaries.
Some of these have fired on the university radio station, wounding
one of the students guarding the facility. The government is jamming
transmissions from the radio station, which still is in the hands
of APPO.
The situation facing workers, students and peasants in Oaxaca,
an impoverished state in southern Mexico, who have been protesting
against the policies of the PRI state government and the national
government of President Vicente Fox (National Action PartyPAN)
is dire. They face the full force of the state under conditions
in which they remain isolated from the rest of the working class
of Mexico.
The primary responsibility for this rests with the trade union
bureaucracy and the Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD) and
its leader, former presidential candidate Andres Manuel Lopez
Obrador.
The Mexican Congress of Labor (CT) is doing all it can to prevent
the Mexican working class from mobilizing in support of Oaxaca.
For his part, Obrador, who postured during his election campaign
as a tribune of the people and this summer was able to mobilize
hundreds of thousands in Mexico City and elsewhere behind his
demand for a recount of the July presidential vote, remained silent
for months on the situation in Oaxaca and tacitly backed the incursion
of federal riot police into the city of 250,000 people.
The struggle in Oaxaca began in May when the states 70,000
teachers demanded pay increases to cope with the high cost of
living in the region. With the overwhelming support of the membership,
Local 22 of the National Education Workers Union (SNTE) called
a strike on May 22 after state authorities, claiming there was
no money, rejected the teachers demand for a wage increase.
On June 14 the state police attempted to put an end to the job
action by evicting striking teachers from a protest camp in downtown
Oaxaca, burning their tents, killing two teachers and wounding
many others.
On August 1, Oaxacans, led by APPO and demanding PRI Governor
Ulises Ruizs resignation, took over a hotel, occupied public
radio and TV stations, and set up barricades throughout the city.
The next day, striking teachers voted to add Ruizs removal
to their strike demands.
Health workers joined the strike on August 16. During the next
month, federal authorities largely abstained from confronting
the Oaxaca crisis. The Fox government was preoccupied with the
contested result of the presidential election. PRD candidate Obrador
mobilized hundreds of thousands to press for his demand for a
vote recount after election officials declared PAN candidate Felipe
Calderon the victor by a razor thin margin.
After the Independence Day observance of September 16, with
the election crisis under control, Fox and the Governance Ministry
turned its full attention to Oaxaca and proceeded with the political
preparations for the police occupation of October 29.
One of the main preconditions for the police assault on Oaxaca
was an official end to the teachers strike, which was engineered
by the SNTE leadership. Under pressure from the national union
leadership, Local 22 leader Enrique Rueda reversed his former
stance and engineered a return to work vote in return for a $42
million contract financed by the federal government.
Rueda and the Local 22 leaders are part of the National Coordinating
Committee of Education Workers (CNTE,) a dissident faction within
the SNTE. Even though they struck a militant pose at the beginning
of the strike, Rueda and the CNTE leaders kept the teachers struggle
confined to Oaxaca. Other CNTE locals, including the one in Mexico
City, remained on the sidelines.
On November 6, SNTE national leader Elba Esther Gordillo, a
PRI politician, warned the Fox administration that she would no
longer tolerate direct negotiations between the Governance Ministry
and the Oaxacan SNTE, demanding instead that it negotiate directly
with the national union bureaucracy. Gordillo declared that any
gains made by the Oaxacan teachers would only encourage radicalism
in the union and called on the government not to grant amnesty
to the teachers or the local SNTE leaders.
Since the takeover of Oaxaca, the PFP police have continued
to receive reinforcements. The Pro Juarez Center for Human Rights
(PRODH) gave evidence last week that out of 86 arrests it had
documented, 59 detainees had disappeared and their place of detention
was unknown.
PRODH also reported that most of the arrests were violent and
detainees had been tortured. PRODH spokesperson Luis Arriaga gave
the example of David Huesca, who was arrested and beaten last
Thursday by PFP officials. Huesca was transported to the Oaxaca
airport. He has not been heard from since.
Lawyers for APPO took the PFP to court last Wednesday, presenting
numerous instances of illegal detention and torture. On the same
day, APPO leaders requested that the Catholic Church in Oaxaca
provide it with sanctuary against PFP arrest.
In the face of increasing repression, Oaxacan workers, peasants
and students continue to resist. Local teachers union leader
Rueda was forced to cancel a November 4 teachers delegates
assembly, blaming APPO for exacerbating tensions among teachers
by advertising the meeting on the radio. The delegate meeting
was to set a return to work date.
On the same day, five leaders of Local 22 were pulled off a
bus returning from Mexico City to Oaxaca and arrested by the PFP.
Four hundred teachers marched in Oaxaca to protest the arrests,
chanting Assassins, Assassins and demanding that the
PFP leave the city.
On November 5, tens of thousands of APPO supporters marched
in Oaxaca demanding that the police leave the city. Among the
marchers were large contingents of teachers, students, peasants
and representatives of the states 17 Indian ethnicities.
A contingent from Mexico City included students as well as members
of the Electrical Workers Union and unions representing university
employees. Leading the march were family members of the victims
of police and paramilitary violence since the Oaxacan crisis began
on June 14.
A demonstration of more than 3,000 teachers in Oaxaca on November
7 opposed a return to work. On the same day medical students and
faculty at the Benito Juarez University declared themselves on
strike.
On November 8, hundreds of women demonstrated, dressed in black
and carrying a coffin. The marchers were dispersed by PFP water
cannons.
Despite the support from some independent unions, the Oaxacan
teachers, workers and students remain largely isolated. Contributing
to this isolation is the perspective of APPO itself.
The Popular Assembly of Oaxacan Peoples was formed in June,
shortly after the attack on the teachers. A coalition of some
three hundred organizations formed APPO to support the teachers
and demand the resignation of Oaxaca Governor Ruiz.
APPO was able to mobilize tens of thousands, driven by the
crisis conditions in the state, which were exacerbated by the
collapse of corn prices, government indifference to the destruction
caused by hurricane Stan in October 2005, and its policy of shifting
water resources from villages to tourist hotels and corporate
interests. APPO dissolved itself this week and reconstituted itself
as CEAPPO (State Council of the Popular Assembly of the Oaxaca).
Its program is a mixture of nativist populism, Oaxacan nationalism,
syndicalism, and pacifism, conforming to the perspectives of the
disparate groups that formed it. These include former elements
of the Peoples Revolutionary Army (ERP) and supporters of
the Zapatista Army, the Communist Party, Anarchists, Maoists and
other radicals, together with elements of the bourgeois PRD.
While refraining from formally supporting any presidential
candidate in the July elections, in deference to the Zapatistas,
who called for a boycott, APPO called for a no vote
for the candidates of the PAN and the PRIeffectively throwing
its support to PRD candidate Obrador.
CEAPPO leaders have now discarded the fig leaf of political
distance from the PRD. The new organization has openly proclaimed
its support for the PRD and Lopez Obrador, and announced its intention
to participate in the latters November 20 rally, called
to proclaim him the legitimate president of Mexico. CEAPPO also
intends to protest the December 1 official ceremony that will
install the PANs Calderon as the countrys president.
Obrador, for his part, has reciprocated, publicly calling for
the resignation of Oaxaca Governor Ruiz.
Such an approach represents is a recipe for defeat and disaster.
The interests of the workers, peasants and students of Oaxaca
and the country as a whole cannot be advanced on the basis of
a policy that subordinates the working masses to any section of
the Mexican ruling elite or any of its political parties. Nor
can they be advanced on the basis of a nationalist perspective,
whether based on Indian ethnicity or Mexican nationalism.
An alternative strategy is needed. The first step must be an
appeal to the working class throughout Mexico for industrial and
political action to defend Oaxacan teachers, workers, peasants
and Indian communities, demanding the withdrawal of the PFP, the
removal of Governor Ruiz and the release of all detainees.
Such a struggle must be conducted as part of the fight to build
an independent socialist political movement that advances an internationalist
program to unite working people in Mexico with their class brothers
and sisters in the US, Canada, Central and South America.
See Also:
Mexican government launches
bloody assault on Oaxaca protesters
[31 October 2006]
Mexico: Government ultimatum
against striking teachers
[17 October 2006]
Mexicos political crises
intensifies after Calderón is certified as president
[11 September 2006]
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