Sección 22 back on the case: Oaxaca's Zócalo reoccupied, motorway tolls "liberated" etc etc

Submitted by Alan on 22 May, 2008 - 15:55.

A 21 day long series of strikes and occupations by Sección 22 of the SNTE teachers' union in Oaxaca began in earnest on Tuesday with the (symbolic?) establishment of rotating plantones (encampments) in the Zócalo (main town square) of Ciudad de Oaxaca and outside of the education ministry building, demanding the freedom of all political prisoners from the 2006 unrest, the dropping of all charges and an end to intimidation against the movement, new elections within SNTE and the handing over of all schools occupied by the priísta Sección 59 (established by the SNTE leadership in order to combat within Oaxaca the dissident Sección 22).

They also occupied a tollbooth on the Oaxaca-Puebla motorway, giving free passage to all motorists, and blockaded the entrance to Oaxaca airport. SNTE teachers struck in solidarity in Michoacán and now government officials are pleading with SNTE members in Chiapas not to follow suit. It looks set to continue a while, in the next couple of days I'll get in touch with some contacts in Sección 22, see what's good down there.

22 May, 2008 - 17:39

oaxacalibre.org is down. Probably not a coincidence

Links! You've beaten La Jornada to the story!

22 May, 2008 - 17:50

oaxacalibre is working fine for me, although it has nothing on this.

La Jornada reported this on Tuesday: http://www.jornada.unam.mx/2008/05/21/index.php?section=sociedad&article=043n2soc

The most up to date I can find is Noticias (Oaxaca): http://www.noticias-oax.com.mx/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2883&Itemid=1

Google shows me delotrolado, which looks like it might be a good source: http://www.delotrolado.net/oaxaca

If you look to the "contraportada" on the right of Noticias, that picture is of the blockade of Ciudad Administrativa, shutting down a whole host of municipal offices and preventing the work of 4000 bureaucrats (no tears shed for them, they have blood on their hands). This shit is spreading, neighbourhood orgs are backing it, the APPO term has resurfaced, and it seems like more and more people are coming out of the woodwork to chip in. And we still have 17.5 days left until the strike (officially) ends.

22 May, 2008 - 17:56

I tracked from the image link
http://www.esmas.com/noticierostelevisa/mexico/734470.html
Blocking government buildings.

22 May, 2008 - 18:06

Yup...the Noticias article I linked to talks of Seccion 59istas and priístas complaining about "neighbourhood organisations" helping Seccion 22 in these blockades and occupations. Apparently they replied to the blockades with "insults, pushing and a few punches but were forced to retire due to their inferior numbers". It's all in the News story awaiting an admin's approval.

I'm guessing that the radical sites are all out of date cos everyone's too busy on the streets. The mainstream media was all over this yesterday. One headline I saw was "THIS is how they lead their pupils by example?". As a Mexican would say, "a huevo que si!"

22 May, 2008 - 21:45

[img][/img]

Edit, I think APPO was recycling an old picture.
http://www.asambleapopulardeoaxaca.com/appo/

23 May, 2008 - 14:08

If I'm reading this right, it appears in addition to all his other offenses, Ruiz is covering up for pedophile in the schools. One would hope they're in Sección 59
http://www.jornada.unam.mx/2008/02/11/index.php?section=politica&article=018n1pol

23 May, 2008 - 16:10

Noticias reports that Seccion 22 and Segob (Interior Ministry) are in talks in Mexico City. The planton rotativo thing seems to mean that the teachers are striking 3 days each by region...so the first group from Valles Central have now returned to give classes today (although Seccion 22 made a rather sharp quip about some schools in the sierra being so inaccessible that not all teachers will get back from Ciudad de Oaxaca in time...from personal experience, I can testify that that's probable) and have been relieved by the next group from La Canada, who are talking about taking some more tollbooths. Hopefully this will work, a nice little picture of the occupied Zocalo:

RE: the nonce thing, can't figure out if it's pure coincidence or an attempt to char the name of Oaxacan teachers. It was a private school, and I'm sure if either Seccion 22 or 59 were in the school, they'd be being dragged through the mud by a wholly unsympathetic press by now. I wouldn't be surprised if this is the tip of the iceberg either...

23 May, 2008 - 16:12

That pic came out. grin

Man the Zocalo in Oaxaca is one of my favourite places in this country, even if it is full of gawping gringos and sunburnt gueros with Lonely Planets.

23 May, 2008 - 20:47
Alan wrote:
[
RE: the nonce thing, can't figure out if it's pure coincidence or an attempt to char the name of Oaxacan teachers. It was a private school, and I'm sure if either Seccion 22 or 59 were in the school, they'd be being dragged through the mud by a wholly unsympathetic press by now. I wouldn't be surprised if this is the tip of the iceberg either...

I suspect its a coincidence, especially since it is a private school, which I missed on first read. (I'm hampered by not actually knowing Spanish). La Jornada certainly seems to be using it to club Ruiz and by extension PRI over the head and shoulders, so you're right, if either faction of the teachers union was even remotely involved the media would be all over that aspect of the story.

27 May, 2008 - 04:37

Now joined by teachers in Guerrero and Chiapas, while Michoacán and Oaxaca are up to their 8th day: http://www.jornada.unam.mx/ultimas/2008/05/26/paran-labores-maestros-disidentes-en-guerrero

EDIT: More on activities in Oaxaca, the motorways towards Puerto Escondido and Mexico City and the airport are blockaded, as well as malls in the city itself "in order to combat bourgeois ideas": http://actualidad.terra.es/sociedad/articulo/oaxaca_profesores_cumplen_semana_protestas_2501898.htm

Tuesday: yet more blockades of motorways, malls, municipal education offices and liberations of tollbooths in Oaxaca, actions starting to spread outside of Ciudad de Oaxaca itself for large portions of the state. Also talk of schoolchildren's families being involved. The local govt's made a second offer to Sección 22, which as of yet has not convened to discuss it: http://www.noticias-oax.com.mx/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=3142&Itemid=1

27 May, 2008 - 18:32

Teachers Union Enters Alliance with Calderón Government

Elba Esther Gordillo has led the Mexican Teachers Union, which she heads, into a formal alliance with President Felipe Calderón’s National Action Party (PAN) government. The agreement called the Alliance for Quality in Education, signed on May 15, the Day of the Teacher, will bring Mexico “the fair and efficient modern educational system that the country demands,” said President Calderón.

The signing of the agreement was a major event and political initiative involving President Calderón, Josefina Vázquez Mota, Secretary of Public Education, and Gordillo, head of the Teachers Union, as well as other important figures from the government, from public universities, secondary and primary education, businesspeople and Catholic educators.
Opposition in National Congress Ridicules Alliance

The National Coordinating Committee of the Teachers Union (la CNTE), the longstanding left opposition in the union, criticized the Alliance for having been cooked up in secret meetings by Gordillo “one of the most corrupt figures who is rejected by the teachers.” The opposition argued that the real objective of the program is “to open education to private interests who will control the development of millions of Mexicans as cheap labor.”

La CNTE held its National Congress in Mexico City at the same time as the new Alliance was being announced. The Congress was attended by 449 delegates from 20 states who debated future strategies for confronting Gordillo in heated sessions. One faction in la CNTE, led by Local 18 in Michoacán, wants to call a meeting of all of those who oppose Gordillo, including some of her former allies. The other faction, led by Local 22 in Oaxaca, argues that la CNTE should remain faithful to its own vision of the democratic control of the union and not work with those who have been part of her operation.

La CNTE leaders argue that Gordillo is on the defensive, her hand-picked state leaders being challenged in Baja California, Durango, Chihuahua, Veracruz and Puebla. She also faced resistance in the state of Chiapas, Guanajuato, Tamaulipas, Yucatan, Zacatecas, and the Federal District.
Opposition Launched National Day of Struggle

La CNTE’s leaders agreed on launching a National Day of Struggle, in reality an escalating and indefinite work stoppage to stop the “dismantling” of public education and to overturn the reforms of the Public Employees Social Security system (ISSSTE). La CNTE has maintained a plantón, or sit-in in Mexico City to protest the ISSSTE reform for more than a year.

The National Day of Struggle began less than a week after the Congress with a teachers strike in Michoacán and blockades of highways and airports by teachers in Oaxaca. La CNTE leaders say that they expect to be able to begin with protests in those two states and Chiapas and to slowly extend the movement to Guerrero, Zacatecas, and Southern Baja California.

27 May, 2008 - 18:37

What's the date of that story David? I recommend you keep on checking Noticias (Oaxaca) for the most uptodate reporting on this...the DF press is largely ignoring in favour of stoking the PEMEX flames and reporting the daily drugs war carnage in el norte.

27 May, 2008 - 18:50
Alan wrote:
What's the date of that story David? I recommend you keep on checking Noticias (Oaxaca) for the most uptodate reporting on this...the DF press is largely ignoring in favour of stoking the PEMEX flames and reporting the daily drugs war carnage in el norte.

May edition of Mexican Labor News & Analysis

29 May, 2008 - 22:12

First part of an article-in-progress from Narconews, which provided sterling coverage of the Oaxaca Commune in 2006. See their archive of Oaxaca reports at: http://www.narconews.com/otroperiodismo/oaxaca/en.html
The author of the below article also has a book: The People Decide: Oaxaca's Popular Assembly.

Two Years Later in Oaxaca: Part I
What’s The Difference?

By Nancy Davies
Commentary from Oaxaca
May 27, 2008

Part I

Nobody here in Oaxaca says things are better. I am trying to put my finger on what is different, and while different, where it might be going. It’s all a question of attitude, and to comment on the subjective existence of a different attitude leaves me open to hoots and cat-calls. But I think I’ll try it.

Forum audience
Photos DR. 2008 Nancy Davies
Below is my sketch of what has changed since the brutal repression of the 2006 social movement’s five month control of the city of Oaxaca. The “social movement”, not to be confused with the National Union of Education Workers (SNTE) or the Popular Assembly of the Peoples of Oaxaca (APPO), resides in the populace seeking change. It is alive and well. It lives in all eight regions of the state, strongly situated within civil society and non-governmental organizations.

Many aspects of the social movement flourish in ways I have not seen before, especially in the form of local organizing and local battles. One example is the lawsuit on the Isthmus against the international wind generation complex built on communal indigenous lands. Other environmental examples include struggles against foreign ownership of mines, and water projects.

Today the most outstanding example is participation in the national movement for public dialogue, on the topic of privatizing PEMEX, Mexico’s oil producer. A national issue, yes, but Oaxaca has Salina Cruz, the big oil city on its southern coast. In Oaxaca, people first gathered during the 2006 movement to discuss public policy, and they are doing it now.

On Monday, May 26 the city of Oaxaca’s public forum (among hundreds of state-wide forums) for discussion of “la Reforma Energética”, (meaning privatization of oil) took place at Casa de la Ciudad at 10:00 AM: The sponsoring organization are civil society: Sinergia, Sevices for Alternative Education (EDUCA) , Insitute for Development of Oaxaca Women

(IDEMO) and the Center of Assistance to the Popular Movement (CAMPO). As the federal Democratic Revolutionary Party (PRD) legislator Othón Cuevas said, “With this meeting today, Oaxaca is sending to all Mexico a message: the Oaxacans want to act as citizens and no longer as subjects. They want to have an effect before things happen and not fold their arms in the face of decisions imposed from the heights of power. This forum also represents the demand of a society which with just reason feels each moment less represented by its governors and its legislators, and in consequence, wants to make heard its voice.”

These public discussions all over Mexico, and across the state of Oaxaca, come at the instigation of Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, the “defeated” PRD presidential candidate and leader of the anti-privatization campaign. Lopez Obrador came to Oaxaca on Tuesday, May 20. He spoke at an “invitation only” event at the Hotel Mision de Los Angeles, to about 1,200 people. He recruited hundreds of them in “brigades” to go door-to-door to collect signatures in opposition to privatization, and dozens to head up the statewide forums.

The national Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) has split along lines of supporting, or not, the petroleum “reform” initiative of President Felipe Calderón. In support stands our governor Ulises Ruiz Ortiz (URO), he who is so indebted to President Calderón for keeping him in office. But things change. When URO was in big trouble, so was Calderón, who barely could control his own National Action Party (PAN) and needed the PRI to vote with him in the congress. Now Calderón holds control. Meanwhile a PRI faction headed by former best-buddy Roberto Madrazo and Beatriz Pagés opposes the energy reform “because it is anti-constitutional”, which in fact it is. (The split reflects internal PRI conflict, as Heraclio Bonilla Gutierrez writing for La Noticias says, “like Sicilian Mafia families”.) With the PRI split on oil privatization, Calderón has little left to gain by supporting URO. Furthermore, the criminal activities of URO created international embarrassment, especially since the news started to leak out about the probable guilt of URO’s executive branch (that could be read “executioners” branch) in state terror.

Forum speaker

URO’s bargaining power diminished when an information leak went to the feds. The first leak came from a retired military general, Juan Alfredo Oropeza Garnica; followed by others of lesser position inside the state attorney general’s office. The information clearly implicates URO’s right-hand man, Jorge Franco Vargas who held the position of Secretary of Government for URO while URO was out campaigning for Madrazo’s failed presidential bid. Franco Vargas has been implicated in running the death squads, along with torture and disappearances in the crimes against humanity perpetrated during 2006. Worse for URO, Franco Vargas is implicated in the 2007 forced disappearance of two men from the Popular Revolutionary Army (EPR), which claims responsibility for blown up oil pipelines in retaliation. The EPR is now “bargaining”; discussing the situation with Calderón. URO, who can only claim that Franco Vargas acted without URO’s orders or knowledge, is becoming a national and international liability.

In another “sign” of URO’s decline, the Supreme Court of Mexico accepted a case of pederasty charges which had been rejected by Oaxaca courts. The case was brought by a mother of a four year old who was assaulted in his plush private kindergarten, allegedly by members of URO’s friendship “bubble”. The Oaxaca court’s failure to proceed implies that URO, or Franco Vargas, is protecting the pederasts. Mothers unite! This particular outraged mother won’t let go. A comfortable middle class woman, she is yet another person radicalized by URO – she includes the entire 2006-2007 repression when she blasts him. This furthers URO’s power-shrinkage, because while many can tolerate murder, few can tolerate child-molesting.

The Movimiento Nacional por la Defensa del Petroleo may be a player in the next election

But no matter. The exciting part is that the public is taking it on itself to organize opposition to the privatization of PEMEX. Being cynical, we may put this in the same category as anti-war protests which are routinely over-ridden by governments – but I salute the Oaxaca context: a state like many others in Mexico where dirty war terrorizes the population.

More than 150 people showed up on May 26, a Monday workday, at the city forum to discuss energy privatization. The structure of the forum gave the first set of presentations to four politicians: the PRD federal deputy Othón Cuevas; the PRI federal senator Adolfo Toledo Infazón; the Convergencia fedral senator Alberto Esteva Salinas; and the state National Action Party’s secretary general, Carlos Moreno Alcantara. Toledo Infazón duly and dully opposes privatization. Convergencia’s Esteva Salinas was over-dressed in a suit, but said the right things. Carlos Moreno Alcantara claimed that the Calderón’s plan “is not about privatization”, but the position of Mexico in the world today. Thinking ahead for our grandchildren, he said, there must be a plan for “strategic resources to defend capitalism, and no more government than is necessary.” He said that. I’m not kidding. The applause was slight. His words rang a echo to the common gossip that Calderón was elected with oil money from Exxon and Chevron, who expect him to pay back the favor.

With vigor and spirit, Cuevas responded by declaring that Mexico and its oil is not on earth to defend the interests of the USA which is squandering billions in Iraq while trying to control Iraq’s oil supply. The audience responded with questions, and after a break the intellectuals and academics had their say, followed again by audience participation. The actual details of the PEMEX ploy (that’s my term, one can hardly think that a company earning over $100 profit per barrel of oil cannot repair its own pipelines or pay for its own deep water wells) have been explained and exposed, in what is probably one of the most profound examples of public education in Mexico, and in direct contradiction to what is coming over national television.

Coincidentally, on May 19, Section 22 of SNTE once again set up their twenty-one day annual encampment to highlight demands for renewing the union contract. Once again, I went to look, along with tourists and footloose residents, at the marvelous combination of organization, defiance, and clever propaganda.

The rainy season in Oaxaca is underway, and vendors, unimpeded in occupying the zócalo and the streets around it, offered both pretty and practical products. Blankets were unfolded and carried off to the tents, hand-made jewelry and pottery sat displayed for the tourists.

Section 22 plantón

The plantón (encampment) covers 15 street blocks. The union demands, in addition to the economic and educational needs, also include liberty for the political prisoners, cancellation of arrest orders, and restoring the schools held by Section 59 and the PRI to Section 22 control. Thus far there has not been much government response to demands for breakfasts, uniforms and shoes, sanitation facilities, community kitchens or basic materials for the 13,500 Oaxaca schools. Section 59 still holds schools, and confrontations continue.

Two years after the mega-encampment there still is no point in mud-slinging regarding the issue of education quality, teacher training or readiness, because this failure – this huge government failure – in Oaxaca cuts across all sectors. A higher proportion of Section 59 teachers with neither classroom experience nor college degrees is cited by Section 22, who themselves will soon lose their ability to hand down their teaching posts to their children with or without the same qualifications. But the problem is so widespread as to make it necessary for the state normal schools, employing professors from the Autonomous University of Benito Juarez of Oaxaca, to conduct classes in pedagogy to the teachers on strike, weekends in the zócalo. These teachers have not yet earned college degrees; in reality, they are teacher-apprentices.

At the moment we first saw the color and movement of the 2008 plantón, in our excitement none of us commented on who the vendors were. Now it’s claimed they are PRI promoted, in the same game of sneak, sell and tell as their PRI predecessors in 2006. Besides infiltration, they also serve to block access to the cafes around the zócalo, provoking another bitter complaint against the teachers on the part of the restaurant and cafe owners. I want to comment on change, but how can I put aside this small fact: the infiltration, according to opinion in Las Noticias, represents the on-going work of Jorge Franco Vargas, the infamous “El Chucky”, even while he’s under investigation for the assassinations, death squads, kidnappings and disappearances and torture of social movement activists in 2006. Two years have passed, and I am sitting in front of my computer trying to put my finger on what has changed. Damn.

Section 22 plantón

Those of us who lived Oaxaca, 2006, do feel a touch of dejá vú, although the size of the teachers’ occupation is modest in comparison to that year’s: the teachers are camping in rotation as they come in from the eight regions of the state. Courtesy (or is it caution?) seems more pronounced. The shop-keepers who suffered financial losses in 2006 asked nicely that the teachers not block access, but as each region rotates in and out that courtesy dissipates. What the teachers try to avoid the vendors accomplish. And since nobody can forget (and many cannot forgive), the 2008 atmosphere also hints of wariness. The Ministerial Police circle the center in vans, but no police are evident inside the zócalo where the sidewalks are occupied and cafe tables stand empty.

Section 22 remains the manpower backbone of the social movement, with about 65,000 education workers. It is the income of 70,000 teachers (including Section 59) which recycles as the largest economic machine in Oaxaca’s economy, (unlike tourism dollars which largely leave the state). The teachers’ income, lost, did great harm; income regained and improved benefits all of Oaxaca’s economy. Teachers’ salaries (re-zonification) are always on the table. At this writing, a reasonable settlement within the next two weeks between the government and Section 22 seems likely because of threats of further disruption. The union presently holds toll booths on the highway, blocks access to the airport and buildings outside the city, and conducts normal strike activities.

The change most evident to me is not the relatively low–key occupations by Section 22. The real changes lie in answering this question: Where is the Asamblea Popular de los Pueblos de Oaxaca (APPO)? Who is now the big player on the field? My response, and the reason I see a post 2006 difference: the people organized.

1 June, 2008 - 17:04

Seccion 22 reject government's offer and promise to continue: http://www.noticias-oax.com.mx/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=3459&Itemid=31

EDIT: Unconnected to the teachers' strike, but a demonstration of the daily social unrest in the city and perhaps a sign of how one action can give rise to another: Unofficial taxi drivers, having had their cars consficated by the cops, went onto to blockade the highway from Oaxaca-Monte Albán (the biggest tourist site in the state) with buses, destroying a patrol car, attempting to erect a tyre barricade and driving police away. The cops rather comradely fled, "abandoning four of their colleagues".

2 June, 2008 - 15:11

narconews were pretty slavish and uncritical with regard to the APPO last time, if I remember. Pimped the ludicrous 'provocateurs' APPO line when people fought the police re-entering the town. Just a heads up.

7 June, 2008 - 22:31
Quote:
narconews were pretty slavish and uncritical with regard to the APPO last time, if I remember. Pimped the ludicrous 'provocateurs' APPO line when people fought the police re-entering the town.

If you can link to anything regarding that I'd be interested to see it. Can't be arsed trawling through narconews' archive to look for it. But from what I remember I think you're mistaken, especially in view of that fact that there was no 'APPO line' due to the multiplicity of individuals, groups and organisations involved, many of whom were fighting the cops. And there were provocateurs operating.
Anyway here's the second and to my mind, much more revealing part of the previous article.

Two Years Later in Oaxaca: Part II
What’s The Difference? - Networking and Local Autonomy: The Thigh Bone’s Connected to The Knee Bone

By Nancy Davies
Commentary from Oaxaca
June 2, 2008

Read Part I of this series here.

Part II

Oaxaca, Mexico now serves as the crossroad for national social movements – and perhaps international ones as well, according to David Venegas, the former political prisoner and activist of the Popular Assembly of the Peoples of Oaxaca (APPO in its Spanish initials).

David Venegas
Photos: D.R. 2008 Nancy Davies
The annual occupations by frustrated members of Section 22 of the National Union of Education Workers (SNTE in its Spanish initals) in their 2008 strike add to the frustration of the population. Permission to convoke a statewide teachers assembly to legitimize new officials for Section 22 within SNTE is clearly a union-busting maneuver, and a dangerous one at that. Stymied by the unsavory Elba Esther Gordillo, abetted by Ulises Ruiz Ortiz (URO) in not yielding on this most important union piece, the tension grows in Oaxaca as we approach the June 14 anniversary of the movement.

Section 22 in the midst of their struggle incorporated other concerns, particularly the privatization of the petroleum industry. This is the legitimate task of teachers – they plow the ground; the social movement plants the seeds. Inside the teachers’ plantón, education proceeds. Alongside the encampment in the Alameda, another anti-privatization forum took place on May 29, sponsored by the National Democratic Alternative (ADN) of the National Democratic Party (PRD).

And if the avalanche of initials and organizations overwhelms you, so does it me –organizations and sectors of organizations are multiplying like rabbits.

Barring another not impossible social explosion, the changes in Oaxaca answer this query:

Where is the APPO? My response, and the difference after the 2006 events, is people organizing on the ground. A network of activists spread across the state who are all, in some sense “the APPO.” As David Venegas told me, when the youth caravan El Sendero del Jaguar arrived in small communities on the Isthmus in May, although the youngsters do not identify themselves as APPO (many don’t belong to the APPO), the townspeople rushed out to meet them shouting “the APPO is coming! The APPO is here!”

We Are All The APPO

The main body of the APPO, those thousands who took to the streets in 2006, are not attending quarrelsome ideological meetings – but they haven’t vanished. “The head bone‘s connected to the neck bone, the neck bone’s connected to the shoulder bone…, now hear the word of the Lord!” Good song. The word of the Lord in Oaxaca is that everything and everybody is connected, in a cascade of inter-related events and movements. The APPO has been described as a movement of movements, and morenow than ever, that seems accurate.

I postulate that a two-fold change in consciousness in Oaxaca has taken root. One involves networking. Civil society caught on to the government policy of deliberate isolation and separation of communities and groups, often accompanied by PRI-provoked violence. That power tactic is being discussed and acted on via cross-cultural communication. The other change is confrontation of authoritarian top-down control. Local control, horizontal control and autonomy leap up within town after town. They create in-your-face challenges to the resident caciques.

This is not to disregard the fact that many social organizations retain a top-down internal structure, many consist of not more than two people, many hold conservative positions. Nor could I disregard the cost in lives: for example the two Triqui radio broadcasters. Nor government harassment. Nevertheless, as the APPO shouted “elbow to elbow”, the social movements spread like water, very strong and not only horizontal, but respectful of each others programs and priorities.

The Journey of the Sendero del Jaguar

I met the sisters of David Venegas Reyes while they were working to get David out of prison. Sonya was raising money, selling calendars. Natalya was speaking and traveling; both attended meetings of the APPO.

As for David himself, I met him for the first time at a public forum regarding political prisoners on the day after he himself was released. He spent eleven months in the hands of the government, grabbed off the street in April of 2007 and framed with a sequence of false criminal charges, then re-charged, and re-charged again, until finally the courts declared an end to it and he was released.

The siblings live in Oaxaca with their parents, and David graduated from a Oaxaca university with a “agricultural engineer” degree, a title he finds now to be totally useless. As he explained, all they were taught was from the north: agribusiness and chemicals. David is a committed anarchist (in the best sense of the classic political tradition), and a member of VOCAL, the APPO-anarchist socialist faction. In person, he sizzles with energy, a handsome twenty-five year old, seemingly tireless and fearless. When I met him the second time he was heading a march to demand release of other prisoners.

According to David, “The Path of the Jaguar for the Regeneration of our Memory” is the result of the collective work of activist boys and girls who participated in the first youth meeting of the social movement, convoked by the APPO in its third state assembly. This meeting of youngsters, carried out in the month of February of 2008 in the town of Zaachila, organized the caravan of thirty young people who have as their fundamental objective “the reorganization of the Oaxaca social movement.”

On May 27 Las Noticias displayed a half-page ad entitled “Pronunciamiento Politico.” It was signed Caravana “El Sendero del Jaguar por la Regeneración de Nuestra Memoria.” In part it reads:

”As in Mexico and the world, many peoples are struggling and resisting (neoliberal) development and progress because they know it will only benefit some few and those few are not the legitimate owners of the land nor of what is found in it. In the region of the Isthmus de Tehuantepec, towns such as Jalapa del Marqués, Juchitán, San Blas Atempa, Zanatepec and Benito Juárez Chimalapas are located at strategic points for the development of mega-projects like the Plan-Puebla-Panama, the Area of Free Commerce of the Americas (ALCA, or NAFTA), the Mesoamerican Biological Corridor and the Alliance for Security and Prosperity of North America (ASPAN).”

The youngsters’ caravan with David Venegas on board left Oaxaca City on May 5, 2008 from in front of the teachers’ building. David’s opinion piece/explanation appeared on the internet blog “Kaos en la Red” and in the newspaper Las Noticias.

The Oaxaca Social Movement: Local Control as a Political Model

Public acknowledgement of issues regarding privatization vs. community ownership – autonomy, local control, indigenous rights and cultural identity – emerged as an integral part of the discourse in 2008. The lawsuits on the Isthmus filed against foreign contractors for the wind generators charge fraud, failure to obtain local input, unfair rental payments as well as misleading environmental studies and failure to observe indigenous rights. It would be a model for the nation if it were won and enforced. It is legally based on violation of the Mexican constitution, closely related to the prohibitions of turning oil over to foreign investors. In the words of Sendero:

“ ... this (2006) movement against globalization not only touched the gates of heaven, took them by storm, which meant that the antagonists–”the governor”, “the state”, “neoliberalism”– were recognized. The demands were direct, they were pressed by solidarity, but also by the insults and discontent of an immoral economy.

The APPO …underlined the necessity of thinking about a new type of authority, one far from Persons governing and Persons governed, but instead (based on the model) “lead by obeying”, as followed by the Zapatistas…to imagine what forms of life suit them, their own beliefs, ...without repeating authoritarian socialism…acting with alliances in which they could fully call themselves “communities”... the APPO simply put forward the idea of returning to “the customary” (usos y costumbres) which expresses alternative forms of possession and of doing politics, in the search for different senses of justice and autonomy for everyone, not for just some.”

The first caravan visited five communities in the troubled Isthmus region, communities on the receiving end of neoliberal assaults. As David explained to me, the misinterpretation that indigenous people oppose “development” is founded on their unwillingness to accept the capitalist model of private gain, which inevitably leads to greed and individual power-grabs. Instead, they seek “development” which evenly benefits the entire community at the same time, leaving nobody side-lined.

As for the Sendero’s caravan, the point was to listen and learn, an attempt to understand. It sounds like the Zapatista caravans, but with a definite difference. In Chiapas, David claims, only one model, the caracoles, prevails. But in Oaxaca each community provides its own model, it’s own version of how to live. Oaxacans, he continued, are much more territorial, not only in the countryside but in the city where the assemblies of colonias meet. “Community” is personal and face-to-face.

Santa Maria Jalapa del Marquez on May 5 observed 47 years since the town was submerged to create the Benito Juárez Dam, an event allegedly achieved through threats and false promises – no surprise there. The relocated population slowly rebuilt, many becoming fishermen. In 2003 the government sprang the idea of the construction of a hydroelectric generator on the dam. Before protests were launched, the government divided the town by handing out lands to those who would vote in favor. Nevertheless, the community won, really because studies showed the hydroelectric project was not feasible. Nevertheless the state and federal governments didn’t let go: the army and police arrived to maintain order.

The Benito Juarez Dam provides water to irrigate farmland in Region 19 of Juchitán and Tehuantepec, among other towns. But something has gone wrong. There’s no water. The Pemex refinery in Salina Cruz receives its quota, but after April nothing went to the campesinos and agriculture. The crop loss is reported at 100%. As the dam’s water levels drop, the church and houses of the drowned town appear like ghosts on the cracked dry ground. The town of Jalapa, now radicalized, alerts other towns threatened with similar mega-projects.

San Blas Atempa, site of a nasty repression and assassination allegedly authored by the PRI cacique Agustina Acevedo Gutiérrez, an ally of Ulises Ruiz Ortiz, was visited on May 6. The people came out to greet the Sendero young people, with the women speaking in public assembly against the ambitious, corrupt and criminal woman who is the cacique.

In Juchitán de Zaragoza on May 7, the Sendero met with the Assembly in Defense of Land, involved in the confrontation with the installation of the Eólic Corridor. Endesa, Hiberdrola, Gamesa and Union Fenosa are the transnationals, which installed “La Venta I” starting with eight generators; now La Venta II occupies 850 hectares of land. The electricity generated is sold to the Federal Electric Commission. The goal is 5,000 generators on more than 3,000 hectares of land previously used for agriculture and cattle gazing.

A decade ago in a sweet Oaxaca landscape, cream-colored oxen grazed by the side of the lagoon road, a dreamy vision of peace. Wind-generators are not un-pretty, and the trade-off for clean energy is evident. But it’s not so simple. The noise of the generators effectively drives out every living thing. La Venta IV is projected for another 2,300 hectares – on Zapotec lands. Protests have resulted in 76 orders for arrest.

The Sendero also visited the community radio in Juchitán, “Radio Totopo” which discusses in both Zapotec and Spanish the problems of the various communities on the Isthmus. Neighbors sustain Radio Totopo personnel with food and necessities. Another resistance campaign formed against Wal-Mart and its outlet, Aurrera. Community radio provides another networking link.

May 8 the caravan arrived at Benito Juárez, in the municipality of San Miguel Chimalapa. This community guards the jungle against exploitation and handing over of concessions. It’s on the border with Chiapas, the Chiapas government forty years ago began to give concessions for cutting wood, and sent Chiapanecos to settle there. The governments encouraged battles between the newcomers and the residents. On their own, the rival groups recognized they observe the same spirit of maintaining the natural environment. In one of the first environmental victories, the Chimalapa territory, covered in woods and virgin jungle and with immeasurable biological wealth and water, held back the government and its commissions. The peoples’ maintain the area.

As an aside, in the midst of the electricity-generation wars, these Chimalapa territories have no electric service. The land legally belongs to Oaxaca; the two state governments collude in privatizing the once commonly-held lands as the relentless neoliberal assault continues.

The caravan ended its first tour on May 14. The final day, the ministerial police of Zanatepec stopped and searched the caravan out in the country, away from any population. According to the caravan spokespersons, the cops came out of the woods to threaten them. Nevertheless “reorganization” of the APPO, that is, the population base, goes on as links are forged. The Sendero youngsters, raging in age from 14 up to “elder statesmen” in their late twenties, plan to visit the entire state, region by region. As David told me, they don’t need to speak with civil organizations, which already have their own agendas. They listen to the indigenous people, the campesinos, the ones trying to guard their lives and their visions. They learn what it is so unique about Oaxaca, which inspires the world.

Original here: http://narconews.com/Issue54/article3123.html

8 June, 2008 - 09:30

Again, unconnected to the teachers' strike or events in Oaxaca (except in the widest sense), this report from the self-organised, community police force in Guerrero.

REGIONAL COORDINATOR OF COMMUNITARIAN AUTHORITIES
OF LA MONTAÑA Y COSTA CHICA OF GUERRERO
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF THE COMMUNITARIAN POLICE
Calle del Trabajo S/n Barrio San Isidro, San Luis Acatlán, Gro. Tel. 41 4 36 29

INFORMATIVE NOTE

30th. May 2008
Communitarian territory

TO OUR FRATERNAL SOCIAL AND POLITICAL ORGANISATIONS
TO THE MEDIA
TO THE PEOPLE IN GENERAL

We hereby inform you, that during the night of the 29th of May 2008, approximately 23:00 hours, our organisation suffered another serious aggression from the governmental authorities, this time in charge of a group of Municipal Preventive Police of Marquelia, Guerrero.

As is already known, a civic ceremony to celebrate the incorporation of the community Campamento Gral. Enrique Rodriguez to the CRAC- Communitarian Police was to take place on 31st of May of this year in this community belonging to the municipality of Marquelia.

After several preparatory activities for this event, a group of compañeros of our communitarian institution left this community in the direction of San Luís Acatlan on board a camioneta. When leaving the city of Marquelia they were overtaken by a patrol of Preventive Police of that municipality. Approximately 3 minutes later, the same patrol of the Preventive Police, returned from the front and, at excessive of speed and with high lights, attempted to strike the left side of our compañeros’ truck, who luckily managed to partially avoid the blow, with the result that the attackers only managed to break the left mirror which fell apart and injured by cuts and blows to the face our Asesor compañero Valentin Hernandez Chapa, who was driving, as well as Comandante Comunitario del Campamento Gral. Enrique Rodríguez who received cuts to the neck.

Immediately after, the municipal police tried to blame our compañeros, when it was obviously a planned aggression, as in the circumstances there was no reason for their excessive speed or strong lights, apart from which they already knew that our compañeros were in that vehicle as they had overtaken only minutes before. Mention should be made that where this took place is exactly where preventive and transit agents of Marquelia are used to putting their checkpoints, and where in past months a Navy Battalion was camped.

After a discussion and account of the confrontation, those of our communitarian police of Campamento Gral. Enrique Rodríguez who went to the spot managed to disarm and capture the Preventive Policeman that drove the vehicle with which they had attacked our compañeros, before being sent before the communitarian authorities, who, at the next regional assembly of the 31 of May here in the Campamento Gral. Enrique Rodríguez will consider the penalties to be received by this person, as we consider that the perpetrated aggression was against our communitarian institution in general.

We also inform you that our wounded compañeros are out of danger as the injuries they received were not serious.

As for the above, we restate our invitation to the Civic Event to be celebrated tomorrow, the 31st of May, from 10:00 hours in the community Campamento Gral. Enrique Rodríguez, municipality of Marquelia, Gro., where this series of aggressions against our compañeros and our communitarian institution will be denounced.

RESPECTFULLY YOURS,
"RESPECT OF OUR RIGHTS WILL BE JUSTICE"
"ONLY THE PEOPLE SUPPORT AND DEFEND THE PEOPLE"
REGIONAL COORDINATOR OF COMMUNITARIAN AUTHORITIES,
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF THE COMMUNITARIAN POLICE

8 June, 2008 - 21:30

Nancy Davies isn't bad...ultimately I'd say it was more or less impossible to make sense of the actions on the ground during the PFP's invasion in 2006. NN ain't perfect but let's not be purist wankers about it, it's a news source at the end of the day.

BTW they've finally reached an agreement as expected. i'd call it a bit of a sellout, seeing as how they held out so long for the release of all political prisoners and the lifting of all arrest orders on movement members (neither of which are mentioned in the deal), but hey: http://www.jornada.unam.mx/ultimas/2008/06/08/avala-seccion-22-acuerdos-con-dirigencia-nacional-en-oaxaca-pero-continuaran-movilizaciones

11 June, 2008 - 04:31
Alan wrote:
BTW they've finally reached an agreement as expected. i'd call it a bit of a sellout, seeing as how they held out so long for the release of all political prisoners and the lifting of all arrest orders on movement members (neither of which are mentioned in the deal)

Oops...actually both of those conditions were met, just La Jornada didn't consider it relevant enough to report. embarrassed

http://www.noticiasvozeimagen.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=3003&Itemid=31

EDIT: Although time will tell on this one, I sincerely doubt we'll see an opening of the Oaxacan jails.

11 June, 2008 - 12:43

you're probably right about that, Alan. Even if Ruiz honors the promise he is more than willing to use unofficial repression.

11 June, 2008 - 18:56

Death squads in Oaxaca.
Approx three weeks ago two indigenous Triqui journalists were assasinated by gunmen for their work on a radio station promoting local autonomy. Below is an article detailing the attack and its aftermath.

http://www.inthesetimes.com/article/3740/death_squads_in_oaxaca/