255 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
255 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
ZAPATISTA SOLIDARITY ACTIONS SPREAD THROUGHOUT MEXICO
|
|
Guerrero Indians March 300 Kilometers on Mexico City
|
|
|
|
by Bill Weinberg
|
|
Cuernavaca, Morelos Feb.28 1994
|
|
|
|
|
|
Nearly 2000 indians arrived here today, having marched all the way
|
|
from Chilpancingo, the capital of Guerrero, the state to the south.
|
|
Organized by the "Consejo Guerrerense de 500 An~os de Resistencia", the
|
|
march is intended to express solidarity with the demands of the Zapatista
|
|
National Liberation Army (EZLN), now engaged in negotiations with the
|
|
government in the southern state of Chiapas. Cuernavaca is the march's
|
|
last stop before Mexico City, which is some 300 kilometers from Chilpancingo.
|
|
As the march approached Cuernavaca's center, local supporters closed off
|
|
the streets surrounding the city's central square, or "zocalo". Police did
|
|
not interfere as they blocked off the street's with their bodies and
|
|
handmade banners. One banner straddling the street read, "Chiapas 1994
|
|
-1968 Tlatelolco : Este Dialogo No Entendemos", flanked by images of tanks
|
|
and guns - "This Dialogue We Don't Understand", a reference to both the
|
|
recent repression in Chiapas and the Mexican Army's massacre of student
|
|
demonstrators 26 years ago.
|
|
Local supporters also blocked the streets with vehicles - some
|
|
bearing posters calling for peace in Chiapas, others bearing insignia of
|
|
the Party of Democratic Revolution (PRD), Mexico's left opposition party.
|
|
One pick-up truck spray painted "EZLN" proved upon closer examination to
|
|
be a police vehicle, apparently abandoned or hijacked for the cause! "Alto
|
|
A La Masacre!" reads one poster adorned with hte image of a dove on a
|
|
bayonet.
|
|
With the streets cleared of traffic, the march approaches the zocalo.
|
|
The banner at the front reads: "Marcha Por La Paz Y Dignidad De Los
|
|
Pueblos Idigenas - No Estan Solos". This last line - "They are not alone"
|
|
- is a reference to the Zapatistas in Chiapas. The banner is followed by
|
|
Mexican flags and giant portraits of Emiliano Zapata, the revolutionary
|
|
hero from whom the today's Zapatistas take their name.
|
|
"! Viva la Autonomia de los Pueblos Indigenos!" cry the marchers
|
|
in unison.
|
|
"! Viva!" return the local Cuernavaca supporters from the
|
|
jam-packed sidewalks.
|
|
"! Viva los Zapatistas!"
|
|
"! Viva!"
|
|
"! Viva Morelos!"; the local home state, which had been Zapata's
|
|
hot bed in the Mexican Revolution.
|
|
"! Viva!"
|
|
"! Viva Commandante Marcos!"; the charismatic EZLN leader.
|
|
"! Viva!"
|
|
|
|
Representing several indigenous communities in Guerrero, the march
|
|
is diverse. Women in traditional indian dress hold infants. Most of the
|
|
men wear straw hats - although one kid wears a Guns'n'Roses cap. Many of
|
|
the hats read " 500 An~os" or "EZLN" in black marker. A marching band
|
|
blasts away on old trumpets and tubas. One contigent wears ceremonial
|
|
indian masks and holds machetes at the shoulder.
|
|
The march files into the zocalo to eat food which has been prepared
|
|
by the local " Red Morelense por Derechos Humanos en Chiapas" - Morelian
|
|
Network for Human Rights in Chiapas. A crowd gathers before a stage which
|
|
has been erected at one end of the square. March leaders address the crowd
|
|
in Mixteco, Nahuatl, and other indigenous languages as well as Spanish.
|
|
Exhuberant burts erupt from the brass band between speakers. Communiques
|
|
from Zapatista Subcommandante Marcos are read from the stage - and are met
|
|
with especially exhuberant "! Vivas!". The banner above the stage reads "
|
|
Paz Con Justicia En Chiapas". One indigenous leader says he speaks on
|
|
behalf of the mountains, rivers, birds, and butterflies of Indian lands,
|
|
as well as the hopes and demands of the Indian people.
|
|
When the crowd thins out , the pavement of the zocalo is
|
|
spray-painted in black, "Viva EZLN". Guitars and rustic hand-made fiddles
|
|
emerge as the marchers and their supporters settle into the zocalo for a
|
|
"noch Zapatista" of traditional Guerrero Indian music and dance. As the
|
|
night wears on, marchers filter to the other end of the square, where
|
|
bivouacs have been erected, to catch some sleep. The makeshift tents are
|
|
themselves adorned with banners. One reads: "Reformulacion Del ART. 27 A
|
|
Favor De Los Campesinos". This is a reference to article 27 of the Mexican
|
|
Constitution, caling for agrarian reform, which was recently altered by
|
|
President Carlos Salinas to allow for privatization of "ejidos", or
|
|
communal lands. The marchers support the Zapatista demand that these
|
|
changes be repealed.
|
|
Meanwhile, Zapatista solidarity actions are reported every day in
|
|
"La Jornada", Mexico's leftist daily, from across the country.
|
|
- In Guerrero, 15 Mixtec Indians of the "Liga Agraria
|
|
Revolucionaria del Sur-Emiliana Zapata (LARSEZ), are staging a hunger
|
|
strike at the local offices of the federal government's National Indian
|
|
Institute (INI), in Tototepec.
|
|
- In Michoacan, sugar workers angered by the closing of a local
|
|
mill, have publicly offered to join the Zapatista insurgency.
|
|
- In Oaxaca, several Indians from the community of Temascal were
|
|
hurt when a demonstration at the federal agrarian reform office, organized
|
|
by the " Frente Independiente de Pueblos Indigenas (FIPI), was attacked by
|
|
the police.
|
|
- In Yucatan, students calling themselves " Zapatistas" protested
|
|
at a campaign stop by Donaldo Colosio, the ruling party's presidential
|
|
candidate. In Guerrero, " El Consejo de Pueblos Nahuas, an Indian
|
|
organization, has also derclared Colosio "persona non grata".
|
|
- In Hidalgo, death threats and army harassment are reported
|
|
against the "Frente Democratico Oriental-Emiliano Zapata (FEDOMEZ), after
|
|
the group demonstrated in support of the Zapatistas.
|
|
Oaxaca's largest Indian and peasent group, the "Consejo de Obreros,
|
|
Campesinos y Estudiantes del Istmo (COCEI) also issued a statement in
|
|
support of the Zapatista demands at a January 13 meeting in Juchitan.
|
|
- In Mexico City, the urban based "Union Popular Revolucionaria-
|
|
Emiliano Zapata" (UPREZ) held a ceremony at the zocalo in support of the
|
|
Zapatista demands.
|
|
- In Puebla, local indigenous communities staged blockades of the
|
|
highway into the city of Tehuacan.
|
|
- In Tamaulipas, Veracruz and Tabasco, dissident oil workers who have
|
|
broken with the government-controlled trade union bureaucracy have staged
|
|
strikes, blockades and demonstrations at plants of the state petrochemical
|
|
monopoly PEMEX.
|
|
- And in Chiapas, unarmed Indians are staging land occupations on
|
|
big ranches throughout the Maya Highlands.
|
|
A nationwide mobilization in support of the Zapatista demands is planned
|
|
for Mexico city on April 10, the 77th aniversary of Emiliano Zapata's
|
|
death at the hands of the forces which went on to establish Mexico's long
|
|
ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI). A massive turnout is
|
|
anticipated.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Communique from the Clandestine Revolutionary Indigenous Committee
|
|
- General Command of the Eje'rcito Zapatista de Liberacio'n
|
|
Nacional (CCRI-CG of the EZLN)
|
|
|
|
Mexico
|
|
June 10, 1994
|
|
|
|
To the people of Mexico:
|
|
To the peoples and governments of the world:
|
|
To the different non-governmental organizations:
|
|
To the Negotiator for Peace and Reconciliation in Chiapas:
|
|
To the national and international press:
|
|
|
|
The Clandestine Revolutionary Indigenous Committee-General
|
|
Command of the Eje'rcito Zapatista de Liberacio'n Nacional
|
|
addresses itself to you in order to report and declare the
|
|
following:
|
|
|
|
First: The CCRI-CG of the EZLN, as we have recently reported, has
|
|
finished its consultations in all of the communities that make up
|
|
and support the EZLN. By means of official reports from assemblies
|
|
in the ejidos and communities, we have learned the opinions that
|
|
are in our people's hearts.
|
|
Second: The CCRI-CG of the EZLN has now counted the votes
|
|
concerning the peace accord proposals presented to the EZLN by the
|
|
Federal government during the dialogue that took place in San
|
|
Cristo'bal de las Casas, Chiapas.
|
|
Third: The result of the free and democratic voting in the
|
|
assemblies is as follows:
|
|
|
|
In favor of signing the government's peace accord proposals - 2.11
|
|
percent of the total
|
|
Against signing the government's peace accord proposals - 97.88
|
|
percent of the total
|
|
|
|
Fourth: The result of the voting about what actions we should take
|
|
in case it was decided not to sign the government's peace accords
|
|
is as follows:
|
|
|
|
In favor of renewing the hostilities - 3.26 percent of the total
|
|
In favor of continued resistance and the convening of a new
|
|
national dialogue to be attended by all of the independent and
|
|
honest forces in the country - 96.74 percent of the total
|
|
|
|
Fifth: Therefore, in accordance with the majority of the
|
|
Zapatistas, the CCRI-CG of the EZLN wishes to inform you that:
|
|
|
|
It rejects the peace accord proposals presented by the Federal
|
|
government.
|
|
It considers the Dialogue of San Cristo'bal to have ended.
|
|
It calls on the Mexican people to attend a new national dialogue to
|
|
be attended by all of the progressive forces in the country. The
|
|
central themes of this dialogue will be democracy, freedom and
|
|
justice for all Mexicans.
|
|
In order not to impede the search for a political solution to the
|
|
conflict and so as to not interfere in the electoral process that
|
|
will take place this coming August, the CCRI-CG of the EZLN orders
|
|
its regular and irregular forces in national territory and outside
|
|
of Mexico to respect a unilateral offensive cease-fire.
|
|
The EZLN guarantees that it will take no offensive military action
|
|
against the Federal army.
|
|
The EZLN will not interfere with the upcoming elections in the
|
|
territories under its control. It will permit the installation of
|
|
electoral polls in these territories under the supervision of the
|
|
different non-governmental organizations and the International Red
|
|
Cross.
|
|
The EZLN will accept absolutely no aid from the municipal, state or
|
|
Federal governments. It will resist the military siege by its owns
|
|
means and with the help of the Mexican people.
|
|
|
|
Sixth: The CCRI-CG of the EZLN thanks the Negotiator for Peace and
|
|
Reconciliation in Chiapas, Manuel Camacho Solis, for his true
|
|
efforts in search of a political solution to the conflict.
|
|
Unfortunately, the historic blindness of the supreme government
|
|
kept it from seeing that its unwillingness to give in to the
|
|
democratic impulse will bring about painful conflicts and unforseen
|
|
consequences.
|
|
Seventh: The CCRI-CG of the EZLN thanks the National Mediator,
|
|
Bishop Samuel Rui'z Garcia and his working group for their efforts
|
|
and sacrifices in attempting to mediate between the parties
|
|
involved in the conflict, their integrity in withstanding pressures
|
|
and threats and their willingness to listen. We hope that in the
|
|
new dialogue that we are calling for today we can count on his
|
|
honest participation in search of political solutions to the
|
|
national demands for democracy, freedom and justice.
|
|
Eighth: The CCRI-CG of the EZLN thanks the honest and independent
|
|
media for its commitment to the truth and for having presented the
|
|
truth to the Mexican people despite threats, pressure and
|
|
blackmail. We would like to publically apologize if we have doubted
|
|
your profession at any point with our clumsy media policy. We hope
|
|
that you understand that this is the first time that we have tried
|
|
to carry out a revolution, and we are still learning. We would like
|
|
to reiterate that, thanks to the efforts of the press, it was
|
|
possible to stop the military phase of the war. We sincerely hope
|
|
that you understand the difficult conditions we find ourselves in
|
|
and our unfair selection of media that we allowed to approach us.
|
|
We hope that you continue publishing the truth.
|
|
Ninth: The CCRI-CG of the EZLN especially thanks the different non-
|
|
governmental organizations, the vanguard of civil society. The
|
|
NGO's have carried out a selfless work in order to bring about a
|
|
peace with justice and dignity for our people. The government's
|
|
siege keeps us, for the moment, from arriving at some pact with
|
|
these organizations. We are still open to dialogue and are willing
|
|
to continue down the path that the NGO's have pointed out to us
|
|
with their commitment: a political route in the transition to
|
|
democracy.
|
|
Tenth: The CCRI-CG of the EZLN thanks all those men, women and
|
|
children, people without faces, throughout the country and outside
|
|
of Mexico who have given us their solidarity and who have joined
|
|
our just cause. Our struggle and death is for you, brothers. We
|
|
will not take off our masks until every Mexican - the indigenous
|
|
peoples, peasants, workers, students, teachers, housewives,
|
|
squatters, artists, intellectuals, retirees, the unemployed - men
|
|
and women without voices or faces, have everything they need for a
|
|
dignified and true life. Everything for everyone, nothing for
|
|
ourselves.
|
|
While the national flag waves without democracy, freedom and
|
|
justice above Mexican soil, we, our tender fury, will continue
|
|
fighting.
|
|
|
|
Democracy!
|
|
Freedom!
|
|
Justice!
|
|
|
|
Respectfully,
|
|
Clandestine Revolutionary Indigenous Committee-General Command of
|
|
the Eje'rcito Zapatista de Liberacio'n Nacional
|
|
>From the mountains of southeastern Mexico
|
|
|