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Mexican government launches bloody assault on Oaxaca protesters
By Rafael Azul
31 October 2006
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Thousands of federal riot police invaded Oaxaca on Sunday to
crush an oppositional movement that has held control of the southern
Mexican state for several months. The significance of this police
operation goes beyond the Oaxaca protests, which have been driven
by growing poverty and inequality. It is a warning to the nations
working class that Mexicos ruling elite is willing resort
to naked violence and repression. The defense of the Oaxacan protesters
requires the mobilization of working people throughout Mexico.
The assault began at 8 a.m. on Sunday when 4,536 Federal Preventive
Police (PFP) officers and 120 Federal Investigations Agency (AFI)
agents entered the state. The force was equipped with 14 armored
vehicles capable of shooting water under pressure as well as pepper
and teargas, and six helicopters. The police took the states
capital city, Oaxaca, 13 hours after the assault began, leaving
three dead and scores injured.
A teargas projectile crushed the chest of José Alberto
Lopez Bernal, a nurse, killing him. Fidel Garcia, a student, died
of a bullet wound. A third casualty, a teacher, has not been identified.
Officially, 40 to 50 arrests were made. However, there are
reports of people having disappeared and being unaccounted for,
including 160 from the town of Nochixtalan who were taken off
a bus on Monday morning and have not been heard from since.
Supporters of the Popular Assembly of Oaxacan Peoples (APPO)
resisted the assault. APPO was formed in the wake of brutal attacks
on striking teachers last June 14. On that day, state police assaulted
and burned down an encampment of teachers, killing two and injuring
many others.
Popular anger in Oaxaca has also been fueled by years of corrupt
government by Governor Ulises Ruiz of the Institutional Revolutionary
Party (PRI), compounded by the paralysis of government reconstruction
agencies one year after Hurricane Stan destroyed much of the states
infrastructure. Other factors are the siphoning of water resources
from Indian communities to the tourist industry and the collapse
of corn prices.
The main demand of APPO and the teachers after June 14 was
the removal of Governor Ruiz. Over the last two months, APPO supporters
occupied government buildings to press this demand.
Two weeks ago the Mexican Senate rejected APPOs demand
when senators from the conservative National Action Party (PAN)
joined with their PRI counterparts to support Ruiz. At this point
the administration of President Vicente Fox (PAN) began preparing
the assault on Oaxaca.
Last week the local bureaucracy of the National Teachers Union
(SNTE), under pressure from the national SNTE leaders, forced
through a vote to end the five-month strike by the Oaxaca teachers.
This opened the way for the police repression to begin.
When the police operation began, APPO radio broadcasts appealed
to the population to confront the police with flowers and banners,
but to avoid violence. Thousands poured into the streets, erecting
barricades that slowed down the security forces.
Proceso magazine reports that the depth of opposition
to the federal police took the PFP command by surprise. As the
police were marching forward, hundreds risked their lives by lying
down and chaining themselves in the path of the police vehicles,
braving teargas and water cannon, until physically removed by
the PFP officers. Helicopters spread teargas ahead of the advancing
federal forces.
An on-the-spot correspondent, Julio Ponce, indicated that APPO
officials are now attempting to make a list of the arrested and
disappeared and ascertain where they are being kept. APPO has
received reports that the arrested have been beaten and abused
in makeshift jails. Many of those arrested were transported to
a nearby military base.
Several times during the assault the police contingent was
forced to detour around massive barricades and residents who confronted
them with a rain of stones and sticks. In two neighborhoods, Aleman
and Viguera, scenes of fierce resistance, hooded PFP officers
were seen systematically breaking into homes and conducting illegal
searches.
Participating in the operation were paramilitary squads linked
to the Institutional Revolutionary Party. Last Friday a PRI squad
killed three people in Oaxaca, including Indymedia correspondent
Brad Will. This was seized on by President Fox as the pretext
for launching the police assaultnot against the killers,
but against the popular resistance. The police action has nothing
to do with protecting the population against paramilitary death
squads.
Foxs lame-duck administration has given contradictory
signals about his support for Ruiz, intimating at times that the
governors removal would be a small price to pay to settle
the crisis in Oaxaca. However, press reports indicate that President-elect
Felipe Calderon, also of the PAN, favored a harder line, wishing
to prevent the crisis from spilling over into his term, which
begins December 1.
The PFP-AIF force entered Oaxacas central square at 7:30
p.m. and proceeded to break up APPOs headquarters with earth-moving
equipment. APPO supporters then retreated to the vicinity of the
radio station from which it transmits. Neighborhood residents
had congregated en masse to defend the station despite suspicious
interruptions in telephone and electrical service to the area.
Over 50,000 students and workers took to the streets in Mexico
City on Monday in response to the assault on Oaxaca. Among the
protesters were many residents of Nezacoyotl, a working class
suburb with a large population of migrants from the Mexican south.
The demonstration included supporters of independent unions. With
the possible exception of the electrical workers union (SUTERM),
unions connected to the PRI-linked Labor Congress (CT) boycotted
the protests.
While many of the protesters were rank-and-file members of
the Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD), the partys
leader, Lopez Obrador, refused to give support to the strike action
in Oaxaca, despite APPOs appeals for his backing. The Oaxaca
crisis has deeply divided the PRD, with some PRD governors supporting
the Fox administration. Even while he was contesting his narrow
loss in this summers presidential election, Lopez Obrador
kept largely silent on the social rebellion in Oaxaca, underscoring
his own support for Mexican bourgeois institutions and the capitalist
order.
While the Oaxaca schools were supposed to reopen on Monday,
it appears that in some of the Indian communities parents attacked
teachers who attempted to go back to work. In response to the
Oaxaca repression, a dissident faction of the SNTE called the
National Committee of Education Workers (CNTE) has declared an
indefinite strike of teachers in the southern states of Guerrero,
Michoacan and Zacatecas, as well as in Mexico City.
On Monday there appeared to be a stand-off in Oaxaca. The University
Radio Station is still under APPO control. APPO has set up new
barricades and moved its headquarters to Santo Domingo Square.
APPO leaders are preparing to convene a congress to form a new
government in Oaxaca, and organizations similar to the APPO are
being created in other southern states.
See Also:
Mexico: Government ultimatum against striking
teachers
[17 October 2006]
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