Courage
And Resistance
In Oaxaca And Mexico City
By Stephen Lendman
30 August, 2006
Countercurrents.org
It
began on May 15 this year when teachers belonging to the 70,000 strong
National Union of Education Workers in Oaxaca, Mexico took to the streets
for the first time to press their demands to the state government to
address their long-neglected needs. They included restructuring teachers'
salaries, improving the deplorable educational infrastructure forcing
teachers to conduct classes in laminated cardboard shacks, a lack of
books and other educational materials and providing food for the many
impoverished children who come to school each day hungry.
After Chiapas, Oaxaca is
the poorest of Mexico's 31 states, each of which has its own constitution
and elected governor and representatives to the state congresses. Both
states share a common border in the extreme south of the country, and
both are predominantly rural which exacerbates the impoverishment of
their people. That poverty level worsened substantially in the 1980s
and especially in last dozen years because of the neoliberal so-called
"free market" policies adopted by President Carlos Salinas
and maintained by successive presidents up to the present that included
the destructive NAFTA trade agreement with the US and Canada. It followed
from the IMF-imposed structural adjustment policies since the mid-1980s
that included large-scale privatizations of state-owned industries,
economic deregulation, and mandated wage restraint that held pay increases
to levels far below the rate of inflation. The result is that the great
majority of Mexicans for years have seen their standard of living decline,
an more of them now live in poverty especially in the rural areas where
farmers are unable to compete with heavily subsidized US grain and other
food imports flooding the country since the NAFTA agreement ended agricultural
import tariffs. It's the main reason so many of them and other impoverished
Mexicans come el norte in desperation to find work unavailable to them
at home.
Mexico's adherence to neoliberal
Washington Consensus policies also added to the country's growing dependency
on capital inflows that includes "hot money" free to enter
and leave the country's deregulated financial markets. It led to an
unsustainable current account deficit and collapse of the peso in early
1995 causing the worst depression in the country in 60 years and far
greater impoverishment of the majority of the Mexican people. Those
conditions still affect most Mexicans, they're not getting better, and
there's a growing discontent and anger because of them. It's leading
to acts of resistance and rebellion against a system of governance that's
enriched a small minority of the country's elite (a handful of them
to obscene levels of wealth) at the expense of the majority poor sinking
deeper into poverty and the misery from it. It's playing out now in
the mass-demonstrations in Mexico City's vast Zocalo Plaza de la Constitucion
(where the country's first constitution was proclaimed in 1813) in the
ake of another stolen presidential election and in the streets of Oaxaca
where teachers, other working people, and many organizations and groups
in solidarity with them are encamped and demonstrating daily for the
rights they deserve. It shows that ordinary people anywhere will only
put up with so much for so long before demanding change. In the Mexican
streets today, it just remains to be seen how far these acts of resistance
will go and what successes, if any, they'll have.
The Spirit of Resistance
in Oaxaca
Back in May, demonstrating
teachers presented their reasonable demands to Oaxaca's Institutional
Revolutionary Party (PRI) Governor Ulises Ruiz Ortiz (known as URO)
who rejected them out of hand. A week later on May 22 the teachers went
on strike and set up a tent city in an area covering 34 city blocks
in the colonial downtown area. This was the 26th consecutive year Oaxaca
teachers had demonstrated demanding redress for their grievances. In
the other years, the teacher action lasted a few weeks, a modest compromise
was eventually reached, and things returned to normal even without satisfactorily
resolving fundamental problems that always remained. Not this time,
however, as events have played out. Negotiations began but after nearly
three weeks produced nothing. The teachers rejected Governor Ruiz Ortiz's
claim that he had no resources to meet their demands. In response, they
blocked government offices, city streets and highways, tollbooths, access
to the airport, caused the cancellation of the Gueanguetza cultural
festival, and brought the important tourist industry to its knees causing
over 1000 hotel workers to be laid off. They also held marches obstructing
traffic through the downtown area and blocked construction projects
on the Cerro de Fortin that overlooks the highway entering Oaxaca from
Mexico City. The frustration is clearly showing among Oaxaca's merchants,
restauranteurs, and hotel keepers who've announced a one-day strike
on September 1 in protest and to demand the government end the strike
that's cost them millions of dollars and closed down the city's lifeblood
tourist industry.
Back on June 2, things began
to intensify as thousands of other working people and representatives
from Oaxacan organizations joined in solidarity with the teachers to
march against the state government and Governor Ruiz Ortiz. They repeated
it again on June 7 in another huge peaceful march numbering about 120,000
in which student and parents' groups, other union members, and representatives
from socialist and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) from Oaxaca
and other states joined with the teachers to help them press their demands.
So far everything was peaceful, as in the past, but all that changed
on June 14 when state police entered the compound where the teachers
were camping. They had riot shields, fired tear gas at the people there,
and were aided by an overhead police helicopter that also dropped tear
gas canisters on the crowds that by now were raging. The police also
destroyed or burned nearly all the encampment shelters and disabled
Radio Planton that had been broadcasting information to the eople from
the main square since the demonstration began.
The teachers took none of
this lightly and fought back as best they could including tearing up
cobblestones to throw at the police and setting police cars afire. After
some hours they managed to regain the upper hand, but from this action
a precedent had been broken of short-lived peaceful actions each year
followed by government obstinacy and in the end a modest compromise.
For the first time ever, this strike action became militant, and it
showed two days later on June 16 when an astonishing 300,000 - 500,000
people marched again (in a greater area of 1 million people) outraged
at how they were treated and demanding the immediate resignation of
Governor Ruiz Ortiz who again ignored them. It was clear this was becoming
more than just another strike for better pay and working conditions.
It had grown to much more than that to include Mexico's long history
of authoritarian rule for and by the rich and powerful with little attention
given to addressing people needs.
A clear show of common determination
and defiance of state authority then happened early in July when the
teachers, other unions, indigenous peoples, religious groups, NGOs and
others from all across Oaxaca state bonded together to form the Popular
Assembly of the People of Oaxaca (APPO) declaring this to be a citizens'
assembly taking over as the governing body of the state. APPO set up
encampments outside all state government buildings including the legislature
and governor's offices closing them all.
So far though, there's no
resolution in sight to the confrontation and no clear idea whether there
will be one soon or what it will be when the current strife eventually
ends. It's now been ongoing for over three months, has erupted in violence
leaving two people dead and has gone well beyond the demands of the
teachers who began it hoping, as in other years, for a peaceful solution.
It wasn't to be and now it's closed off highways and the schools, crippled
the state's tourist industry, caused physical damage in the city, and
polarized the people en masse against the Oaxacan government. The teachers
and other demonstrators showed it by seizing government offices forcing
the governor and officials to work out of hotels and then other makeshift
facilities when demonstrators warned hotel mangers they would peacefully
take over the ones allowing state officials to hold sessions there.
The governor is now under
enormous pressure with the people demanding he resign immediately. In
desperation he's apparently disappeared, and his whereabouts remain
secret. Unless in hiding he orders the state authorities go all out
in violent confrontation, APPO representing the working people of Oaxaca
is now the functioning authority in the state. It remains to be seen
if it intends to hold on to it and can do it. For now though, the confrontation
continues and it's getting even uglier. On August 21 at 3:00 AM, four
vans of armed men (apparently police and hired paramilitary thugs) attacked
the people guarding the antenna of Channel 9 and radio 96.9 with high
powered weapons resulting in several people being wounded and one killed.
In retaliation, the demonstrators took control of 10 AM and FM radio
stations and are using them to inform the people what's happening on
the streets. Other attacks also have been occurring most nights elsewhere
in the city with people shot at or disappeared again apparetly by the
state police and hired paramilitaries. So far the Oaxacan people are
resolute and determined to see this through to the end and to do it
nonviolently. They have the numbers on their side, and up to now the
Federal government has been reluctant to intervene because of the mass
peaceful resistance movement in the Mexico City streets and elsewhere
calling for a just resolution of the fraudulent July 2 presidential
election vote count so far unaddressed.
The Struggle for
Electoral Justice On the
Streets of Mexico City
If the people of Oaxaca stand
firm and succeed in effectively running their state and getting redress
for their demands which are quite reasonable, it will add momentum to
the national campaign in the wake of the fraudulent Mexican presidential
election now playing out simultaneously in Mexico City's vast Zocalo
public square and elsewhere around the country. For weeks, Party of
the Democratic Revolution (PRD) candidate Lopez Obrador (known affectionately
as ALMO) and his supporters have maintained a 12 mile encampment in
downtown Mexico City and effectively kept the city in gridlock. They've
symbolically closed government offices, shut down whole sections of
streets across the city for miles, taken over toll booths, for a time
blocked Mexico's Stock Exchange, and held mass marches through the streets
with as many as a record 2 million turnout at one of them to support
their candidate. They demand a full and honest vote recount of the July
2 presidential election results that had clear rampant fraud and rregularities
unsatisfactorily addressed. Unless they are, Obrador promised his supporters
his campaign for an honest recount of all precincts "vote by vote,
precinct by precinct" will continue indefinitely in the courts
and on the streets where like in Oaxaca civil resistance will be used
if their reasonable demands by peaceful protests are ignored which so
far they have been.
At this point, there's no
way to know for sure how the battle for electoral justice will be settled,
but several key dates are approaching fast. The issue of resolving the
election's official winner is in the hands of the Federal Election Tribunal
(or Trife...prounounced Treefay). It has until August 31 to officially
complete its final count and up to September 6 either to declare a winner,
annul up to 20% of the precincts without annulling the entire election,
or annul the whole thing which by law would mean the Congress would
choose an interim president and have a new election within two years.
A second key date is September 1 when current President Vincente Fox
must give his annual State of the Union address. Lopez Obrador has said
if the Trife declares National Action Party (PAN) candidate Felipe Calderon
the winner, he and his supporters will protest in mass "civil resistance"
at the halls of Congress on that date.
Two other fast-approaching
dates must also be watched - Mexico's national Independence Day on September
15 and the following day when traditionally a military parade is scheduled
through the historic center of the city. On September 15, the president
always comes to the balcony of the Palacio National on one side of the
square, rings the ceremonial bell and leads the "cry of pain"
from the Zocalo. Lopez Obrador promises if Calderon is declared the
winner he and his supporters will replace Vincente Fox with their own
cry of pain and disrupt the traditional commemoration then and again
the following day of the parade.
How this will be resolved
is now in the hands of the seven Trife judges who on August 28 unanimously
dismissed allegations of massive fraud and are almost certain to declare
Felipe Calderon the winner and new Mexican president. It's final decision
cannot be appealed. Lopez Obrador responded calling the ruling "offensive
and unacceptable for millions of Mexicans." He told his assembled
followers in the Zocalo this court decision "represents not only
a disgrace in the history of our country but also a violation of the
constitutional order and a true coup d'etat." He also called his
opponent a "usurper" and added "the constitutional order
is broken.....and the electoral tribunal decided to validate the fraud
against the citizens' will and decided to back the criminals who robbed
us of the presidential election." He went on to say Mexico "needs
a revolution" and vowed to name himself president when the Trife's
official ruling is announced.
There's no way to know for
sure what will happen next, but this may be a watershed moment in Mexico's
history. The long-entrenched institutions of power in the country are
being challenged as never before. Since the Trife, as most expected,
failed to address the overwhelming fraud and election theft, there likely
will be civil resistance in the streets in opposition that potentially
could become a mass uprising over the coming weeks. If this happens,
it could threaten to unseat the federal authorities in the capitol and
lead to mass violence and bloodshed as they attempt to restore order.
With that in mind, it's been rumored that a contingent of US Special
Forces has been sent to help the Mexican military guard the country's
oil fields in case of trouble. Mexico's Pemex state oil company produces
about 3 million barrels of oil a day and ships about half of it to the
US, thus making Mexico one of this country's leading oil suppliers.
It's also gone unreported
that the Congress in Mexico City is surrounded by 6 and one-half foot
high grilled metal barriers. Behind them are 3,000 special shock troops
who are Federal Preventive Police (PFP), a force drawn from the Mexican
Army and members of the elite Estado Mayor or Presidential military
command. They form a Praetorian Guard line of defense armed with tear
gas launchers, water cannons and light tanks assigned to protect the
institutions of power against a rebellion that might threaten to storm
the legislative Chamber of Deputies, Senate or the Palacio Nacional
(the National Palace seat of the federal executive in Mexico).
Given the constant mass demonstrations
in the Mexico City streets, this force is certain to be on high alert,
can easily be reinforced if needed, and is now ready to act if civil
resistance turns to disobedience or rebellion in the aftermath of the
final Trife ruling that now looks to be a mere formality. Blood in the
streets is nothing new to Mexico, and it may be seen there again as
tensions now are very high and not likely to subside soon. Lopez Obrador
said if the Trife formally declares Felipe Calderon the election winner
he will lead a civil resistance movement in opposition and do it by
setting up some kind of parallel government. If he follows through and
keeps his word, the battle lines will be clearly drawn in a struggle
ahead that likely will be turbulent, protracted and uncertain as to
how it will end.
Another potential source
of trouble is the still unsettled matter of 30 political prisoners arrested
on May 3 and 4 in San Salvador Atenco. Addressing that issue quietly
and much more is Zapatista (EZLN) leader Subcomandante Marcos. He and
many thousands of his supporters and organizations allied with him representing
many thousands more in their Zapatista Other Campaign organized a national
movement to end Mexico's unjust economic system of corrupted and predatory
capitalism that exploits people for profit ruthlessly. His goal one
day is to bring real social, economic and democratic change to the country
but do it outside the political process within which he believes it
can never happen.
Toward that goal, on January
1 this year, Marcos began a six month campaign taking him to all Mexico's
31 states to meet and listen to a diverse range of people, groups and
organizations hoping to gain greater support for his mission and goals.
The spirit of APPO and people on the streets in Oaxaca are very much
a part of the Other Campaign Marcos is trying to build. What's not part
of it is supporting Lopez Obrador's campaign for the presidency because
Marcos wants much greater reform for Mexico than he believes Obrador
would ever work for if elected or even be able to achieve through the
electoral process if he wanted to. He hopes his Other Campaign can achieve
it, and with a great enough organizing effort is trying to build unity
among many diverse elements in the country to back him in his campaign
for real change and the benefits it can bring to the great majority
of the Mexican people.
With so much resistance happening
on the streets of the country today that's likely to intensify after
the August 28 Trife announcement, Mexico may be more ripe for real change
now than it's been since the heroic efforts of Emiliano Zapata Salazar
helped lead a national revolutionary movement against the Porfirio Diaz
dictatorship that began in 1910 and led to the dictator's overthrow
the following year. Subcomandante Marcos and his modern-day Zapatistas
may sense another watershed moment in Mexico's troubled history and
feel now is the time to seize it and go for the change he hopes to help
achieve.
For now though, it remains
for events to play out in the upcoming days and weeks throughout the
country. There are strong indications that Mexican authorities sense
a troubled time ahead, are armed and ready for it if it comes with likely
US military support, and will have to consider how to deal with it.
It's in their hands to decide whether to use violent militant action
against the people demanding justice or relent and give in enough to
keep things from spiraling out of control. Whatever action they take,
it's possible Mexico may never be the same again, but it's still too
early to know and no one should be foolish enough to guess. The best
anyone can say is stay closely tuned in case Mexican history is about
to be made.
Stephen Lendman
lives in Chicago and can be reached at [email protected].
Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com