top
Americas
Americas
Indybay
Indybay
Indybay
Regions
Indybay Regions North Coast Central Valley North Bay East Bay South Bay San Francisco Peninsula Santa Cruz IMC - Independent Media Center for the Monterey Bay Area North Coast Central Valley North Bay East Bay South Bay San Francisco Peninsula Santa Cruz IMC - Independent Media Center for the Monterey Bay Area California United States International Americas Haiti Iraq Palestine Afghanistan
Topics
Newswire
Features
From the Open-Publishing Calendar
From the Open-Publishing Newswire
Indybay Feature

Monday, Oct. 30 Report from Oaxaca

by danielsan
While the global media conglomerates call this a solution to the Oaxaca Problem, and claim that the government has reestablished order and taken control of the city center, today it is obvious that they are lying.
640_bienvenido.jpg
The police have amassed quite a force here. True. The march to the city center was swift and brutal. True. The police control Oaxaca City. Absolutely false.

People took to the streets today en masse, with three separate marches converging near the Zócalo and marching past the police lines. The police occupied the Zócalo yesterday and destroyed what people had built up, but it is clear that this is not end-game, but rather a show of force designed to scare people off the streets and out of the meetings.
§banamex
by danielsan
640_imagen003.jpg
§baño de sangre
by danielsan
640_imagen002.jpg
But it doesn´t look like it´s going to work. The people of Oaxaca have spent the last five months in the streets, and aren´t ready to give up with the symbolic fall of the Zócalo.
§marcha
by danielsan
640_imagen001.jpg
The more time people spend in the streets, the more accustomed they are to taking them. The more time people spend doing the hard work of creating a participatory democracy, with every night spent without sleep but with plenty of time maintaining a presence in the streets,... after five months of work and sweat and blood, people aren´t scared of the helicopters anymore. The people in the streets today refuse to be intimidated. The show of force was just that, a show. And the whole world is watching. Word is spreading of the protests in Mexican Embassies. Brad knew just about everyone in Oaxaca City before he was murdered. Now those who didn´t know his name are asking about him. The lies being printed in the corporate controled media will not go unanswered: There was no `shootout´ with armed APPO members, as reported by the Dallas Morning Star. The shooters have been indentified, regardless of what the government says. I.M.P.U.N.I.T.Y.
They aren´t interested in indentifying or prosecuting the people who shot an unarmed foreign media correspondent, because they were plainclothes police. Lame duck president Vincente Fox uses the death of Brad Will as an excuse for sending in the federal troops and the media spin it as a legitimate reason??? What world am I living in? Yes: an indymedia reporter is shot and killed by plainclothes police, and the President says federal troops will restore order. They do not march to the home of the identified murderers, however. They kill a 15 year old boy and a teacher. It´s not a surprise, but it´s a pretty transparent excuse for anyone to swallow. They´re not interested in bringing those who harass and intimidate the media to justice, because they pay people to harass and intimidate the media. The headquarters of the Oaxaca City daily `Noticias´ has been blockaded for two years by paid government thugs (`porros´). Radio Universidad is back on the air thankfully (and just recently) after an August incident in which porros poured acid on the radio transmitter in order to silence the station.
According to AP Writer Mark Stevenson,
`Oaxaca remained deeply divided between the protesters demanding Gov. Ulises Ruiz's resignation and those yearning for a return to the tranquil days when foreign tourists browsed shops and dined on the region's famous mole sauce.´
Anyone who says those days were tranquil never saw the resultsof NAFTA on the people of Oaxaca. Don´t get me wrong--there are those who welcome and even cheer the PFP (Federal Preventative Police: they seem to be preventing a popular campesino uprising). They are the reason that people have been drowning in poverty for five hundred and fourteen years. They are white, they are rich, they are conquistadores. They cheer the arrival of the PFP to put the indios back in their place, to restore the tranquil days of slavery and servitude. They are willing to shoot teachers in the streets for daring to stand up, and they are willing to shoot indymedia journalists in the streets for documenting it. I talked to two people I want to describe to you, in relation to the `deep division´ in Oaxaca. One, a woman who works in the city center, who stopped me and asked me specifically to tell the people of my country that this is not just the teachers, that this is not APPO, that this movement and this resistance is made up of the pueblo, the people. The other, a fisherman who believes that the teachers are just trying to fatten their own paychecks. I asked him is the politicians were interested in the same, and he said of course, that all people are looking out for their own interests. True to a point, but to what point are people willing to go to that end?? To murdering reporters? To imprisoning teachers?? To bulldozing barricades with notorious Catapillars?? To firing watercannons into the face of viejitos waving the Mexican flag?

How far are they willing to go??

The people of Oaxaca, for better or worse, are seeing just how far. And the people of the world will see just how far Oaxacans will go to resist, to defend their land from foreign invaders, because just as in neighboring Chiapas, this primarily indigenous state remains somewhat separate from the rest of Mexico, with more in common with Guatemala in some ways than cities further north, the unconquered and unconquerable indigenous. The `Indian Wars´ continue, and the Maya resist.
Add Your Comments

Comments (Hide Comments)
by aspartame
danielsan: thanks for the on-going coverage of the people, not the police. viva indymedia! keep safe.

by Jamie Bronstein
"Visit Oaxaca; Enjoy the Repression."

by Ramiro
¡QUE VIVA LA APPO! ¡QUE VIVA OAXACA! ¡QUE VIVA INDYMEDIA!

Take care of yourself, Danielsan!
by hooligans?
A big difference I've noticed between friends who have been to Oaxaca who have at least some analysis of their surroundings and what I'm reading on-line is the importance of APPO, both from the perspective of Oaxacans and for our interest here. APPO is spending the current crisis denouncing provacateurs and 'those outside the movement', saying that resistance to the military gives them justification for violence. Then, indymedia reporters and others are reporting that basically, APPO is at the center of what's happening in Oaxaca and not paying any recognition to this fact that APPO is denouncing the people who are fighting back.

The simple fact is that many people do not agree with this "head of the movement, representation" view of struggle, let alone non-violence as a code.

Appo is very undecided in the minds of many of us in the States, not to mention that obviously there is a fair amount of disdain from Oaxacans themselves( a simple surmising of historical situations ie. this is not exactly a new phenomena that 'representatives' move from pronouncing the motives and demands of a movement to its guidelines, restrictions, and enemies- and people quickly wisen to the fact that someone is labeling their resistance as "acting on the part of the state"). My point is, something doesn't fit. People don't go out and fight the cops when people are being shot, and then later say 'oh, we were really HELPING the state in that situation'. So its not hard to see that APPO plays something of a reactionary role in the situation. What's important is for us to recognize the presence of real struggle going on, and reject the spin and political language which allows repression and class conflict to be mystified.

If there's any hope at all, its that APPO is far less influential than is being portrayed( which, from what I've heard is true), and that there is a general consciousness in Oaxaca that ALL political solutions are antagonistic to the quality of life. It would also help to see more discussion around the fact that there is an obvious conflict of interest between APPO and some of the people on the streets.
by esperanza
i am so greatful for these reports from oaxaca. those of us in corporate media land are starving for this information. we need to document the attempts to take PUBLIC streets from us and our amazing taking of streets! many people in power, the federal governments of us and mexico, imf, etc., want to diminish our right to assemble and whats going on in oaxaca reminds us that we have the power in the streets and we will continue to maintain it. stand up for our rights!
by Viva la APPO!
and the theories begin..

privileged santa cruz anarchists trying to criticize a movement from the outside. how counter-revolutionary is that? okay, so there is no proof this person is a SC anarchist, but I'm pretty sure s/he is.

if you would know anything about the APPO, you would know it is not one entity, but many social justice organizations under one banner, including the anarquistas. so, no, the APPO is not as "structurized" to think as one sole anarchist entity as, ironically, you theoretical anarchists would want. don't you advocate for free-thinking and free-initiative? or is it only when it falls under the theories of anarchy? this is what the APPO is. a meshing of different ideologies uniting for one objective (as of now): getting rid of URO.

plantones (sit-ins), barricades, graffitti, marches, fires...they are all different strategies for one cause. the call to be non-violent is a call in the face of a real massive murder scene in Oaxaca, Tlatelolco style.

please cease to create divisions within the supporters of the APPO. you are not gaining anything from your comments.
by Frank Instein
...so why can't the 'indios' just get with the program? Instead of hopping around like crazed frogs and saluting fatboy Flavio Sosa (whose kids go to private school anyway), why not just hit the road, Juan, and go north to where the work is at? Don't even have to cross the border - there's lots to do up here in Nuevo Leon, Tamaulipas and Coahuila

The indios (and who are they? Aren't we all mestizo?) were beaten when Cortes hit the beach. 5th Columnist tribes, like the Olmec and Huastec, who had something to gain from seeing the Aztec subdued by the 'foreign invader', welcomed their 'libertaion' and sealed the fate of their ever being an opportunity for an indio homeland.

For as long as groups like APPO, the neo-Zapatistas, et al are led by middle-class, university-educated 5th columnists with selfish interests, like Sosa and Guillen, there will always be those whose only desire is to foment trouble, prevent a settllement and keep their lives meaningful - this includes all the 'Armchair Zapatistas' in the US and Europe.

Luis Echeverria must be beaming at the PFP's antics - even if Brad Will's death was a 'mistake ' - and, seriously, how are sticks, stones, molotov cocktails and .22 pistols gonna's stack up against the bullyboys in black who have history on their side?

Get with the program, get the teachers back in school and the kids back at their desks. Teach them that all this violence is of no help whatsoever - as two civil wars can attest - and Ruiz is out of office soon anyway...'Effective Suffrage. No Re-Election' is not an empty promise.



by la APPO
QUE VIVA LA APPO! QUE CHINGUEN SU MADRE LOS GACHUPINES...Y LOS VENDIDOS!
by Juan Galtieri Velasquez
Por favor, explicame.

En sabado pásado (30 Octobre), hay fotos en 'El Milenio' (un periodico de Monterrey, NL) de los lineas APPO en Oaxaca. En un foto, es muy claro - hay tres personas con pistolas que tiran. A quien?

Hay respuesto por ese?
by llevan camisetas rojas, no?
Los que llevan camisetas rojas son los paramilitares. No son del APPO. No trabajan por el pueblo, sino que por las esfuerzas de URO y Fox.
by Robert Flory (posted by Robert Norse)
From : Robert Flory
Sent : Thursday, November 2, 2006 3:10 PM
Subject : Oaxaca update. 2 Nov. 2006



I leave tomorrow so this will be my last update. Today has been a very active
day. A pair of helicopters has been circling all day. The zócolo is closed
although yesterday the police were letting people walk through. This morning
the PFP advanced on Ciudad Universitaria. There is some question as to whether
they have authority to do this as universities in Mexico are autonomous, but
advance they did with 6 "tanquetas". These are basically armored trucks
equipped with front shovels like snow plows (to move obstacles) and water
cannons. The water is said to contain chili so it will burn the eyes. They used
a lot of tear gas as well. At least 8 people were injured, among them two
photographers, two policemen and 1 demonstrator. I haven't been down there yet
but saw footage on the TV and a lot of smoke. My friend reports tear gas being
used near her house just north of the university. Apparently the police have
made a retreat this afternoon and the university radio is still broadcasting.
You can find them here: http://radio.indymedia.org/ search for the "Radio APPO"
link. I don't know if the police will make another attempt this evening. The
police have also been going into people's houses to arrest them. One person
reports a three step campaign by the police: take the zócolo, remove the
barricades and arrest some 200 prominent people in the resistance. The first
two steps have been accomplished. No one knows how long will the police will
remain or what will happen when they leave.

Even more dangerous are the priistas and porros who support or are being paid
by the government. Often armed, they drive around in vans or pickups. Most of
the deaths in the past five months can be attributed to these people. Several
people have also disappeared. The teachers are unarmed, although the APPO does
have sticks, machetes and Molotov cocktails. The people accused of killing US
citizen Bradly Roland Will "escaped" from jail. This is how the government
works here. None of the detained teachers have managed to escape.

Today is the Day of the Dead and there are altars honoring those killed in the
struggle at the teacher's new platón site, the plaza outside of Santo Domingo.
Today's paper says the 4000 teachers of sector 2 of section 22 of the federal
union of teachers (SNTE), those who work here in Oaxaca, have decided not to
return to class, although teachers in other parts of the state are returning.
In one town teachers were prevented from entering a school by other teachers
and in another by parents. It seems that the teachers' demands are in the
background while the APPO is resisting the PFP. The teachers were guarding the
government buildings but its not clear what they are doing now. They are not
being paid and 10's or 100's of thousands of children are not attending class.


President Fox is saying that the problem in Oaxaca is more difficult than he
realized and will most likely be inherited by his successor, Felipe Calderon in
December. The government of this city remains paralyzed, now for over 5 months.
The economy is suffering badly from reduced tourism. Normally the hotels would
have been full of tourists for the Day of Dead, and back in July, the
Guelaguetza.

There continue to be protests in other parts of the country, most notably
Chiapas where subcomandante Marcos called for roads to be closed and other
actions is support of the Oaxaca struggle yesterday. He is also calling for a
nation wide work stoppage on Nov. 20.

Please find some photos from yahoo news attached. Their complete slide show can
be found here:
http://mx.news.yahoo.com/fotos/ss/events/ts/20061006_oaxaca/im:/061026/8/1xi0g.html?sp=-1&lsp=6000

I hope I've been able to give an accurate picture of the events I've
experienced here, a small part of all that is happening. Thank you all,
Robert






We are 100% volunteer and depend on your participation to sustain our efforts!

Donate

$230.00 donated
in the past month

Get Involved

If you'd like to help with maintaining or developing the website, contact us.

Publish

Publish your stories and upcoming events on Indybay.

IMC Network