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READ
THE EMERGENCY DELEGATION
TO CHIAPAS REPORT BACK. THE DELEGATION TRAVELED FROM SEPT. 21-28,
2002.
To:
All committees, groups, and individuals in solidarity with indigenous
people in Chiapas, Mexico
A
strategic, well-coordinated campaign of paramilitary attacks has
reached alarming levels in Chiapas, Mexico. Since mid-August 2002,
new paramilitary attacks have taken the lives of four Zapatista
leaders, wounded 20 supporters and displaced hundreds of indigenous
community members. President Fox claims peace in Chiapas, but
the paramilitary campaign--in close coordination with local police
and the Mexican Army - represents a new initiative directed against
autonomous indigenous
(Zapatista) communities. Anyone holding authority in a Zapatista
community stands in the cross hairs. Zapatista communities have
called on the international community--once again--to stand with
them and resist the violence.
Antonio
Mejia, a Zapatista leader from the community of K'an Akil, was
the most recent victim. As Antonio's wife escaped from the scene
under fire, she was able to identify the killers as paramilitaries
from with the PRI-affiliated Los Aguilares." So far,
none of the memebers of this group have been arrested. Unfortunately,
this kind of impunity is all to common in Chiapas, where PRI-affiliated
paramilitaries often coordinate with local police and the army.
Take
ACTION:
- Sign
on your organization or yourself to this letter.Contact
[email protected]
to add your signature.
- Learn
more. Go to the MSN Chiapas
Emergency Info. Links page. The page contains links to recent
articles about the re-escalation of paramilitary violence and
the Chiapas Indymedia site.
- Protest!
at your local
Mexican consulate. If you can't organize a street protest,
use the letter below
for a fax-in. Go here
to find the consulate and fax number closest to you.
- Join
an MSN delegation.
We are putting out feelers for our next delegation to Chiapas.
Can you join us? Let MSN
know.
The
current conflict centers around control of land. Much of the land
in areas of Zapatista influence is communally held and governed
by autonomous authorities.
Tensions increased in recent months as the state government offered
financial assistance to individuals with land titles. In response,
paramilitary groups are trying to claim the land for private use.
Chiapas Governor Pablo Salazar was elected in 2000 on a platform
of peace and negotiation, though Zapatista communities largely
refused to participate in the election. Salazar appears to have
abandoned his commitment to reconciliation in favor of bowing
to his new constituency. Salazar was elected under a multi-party
banner led by the PAN, but he was a PRI official for most of his
political career.
The
federal government also has a hand in increasing tensions. Autonomous
communities report increases in troop movements in recent weeks
and there appears to be support, if not outright cooperation,
between the military and paramilitary groups. Zapatista supporters
report paramilitary groups are often armed with AR-15s, a military
weapon whose use is strictly limited to the army.
The
recent attacks betray campaign promises by President Fox to comply
with the three Zapatista demands that would re-start peace talks:
release of Zapatista political prisoners, de-militarization of
seven Zapatista-held areas, and passage of an indigenous rights
bill based on the San Andres Accords. Fox initially paid lip service
to a lasting and dignified peace in Chiapas. Now he shows his
true colors by sending in
more troops and turning a blind eye to paramilitary violence.
The current paramilitary attacks also reveal the failures of Fox's
so-called Federal Indigenous Law to resolve the root causes of
the conflict in Chiapas. Indigenous communities and organizations
rejected THE LAW because it gutted the provisions of the previously
signed San Andres Accords.
The
United States also shares responsibility through the training
of Mexican military personnel, and the supplying of arms and military
equipment. In the four years between 1996-2000, the US government
provided more than $141 million in grants. (http://www.ciponline.org/facts/mx.htm#Overview)
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