Socialist Action /April 2001

Zapatistas Enter Mexico City
By BENJAMIN A.
MEXICO CITY-Mexico is a very racist country. Being
poor is a crime but being an Indian is an even worst crime. "Indio"
is he who is ignorant, uncultivated, dirty. From thousands of TV screens,
gigantic ads, or the presidential chair, the powerful shout at the Indian,
"you're worth nothing."
That is the world that the EZLN rejects, and that
rejection led it to the Zocalo, the country's central square, on March 11.
Never, since the democratic and pro-socialist movement
of 1968, had a social movement crowded the Zocalo like the Zapatistas did.
This square is home to four of the country's powers. The Cathedral is there
and the federal government's National Palace; the local government has the
City Hall, and the bourgeois have many central bank offices.
Close to 300,000 people saw the Zapatista delegation
either in the Zocalo or in the streets as they passed, and thousands more
saw them in the rallies they held all the next week.
The Zapatista march is part of the struggle that
the EZLN has waged against the government since 1994, in defense of Indian
rights but also for many popular rights and against neoliberalism.
After Vicente Fox, from the right-wing opposition
party, PAN (National Action Party), came to office last December, many thought
that a window to solve the conflict had opened. But it soon became evident
that Fox was following the same strategy as his predecessor, President Zedillo-continuing
a low-intensity war against the Zapatistas.
The Zapatista guerrillas had three demands for
reestablishing peace negotiations with the government-the liberation of
all Zapatista political prisoners, the dismantlement of seven of the military
bases in the conflict area in Chiapas (there are over 200), and carrying
out the agreements between the Zedillo government and the guerrillas, known
as "Acuerdos de San Andres" and the law project that came from
them.
When the Zapatistas arrived in Mexico City, all
Fox had done was dismantle four out of seven military bases, send the law
project (Ley Cocopa, or Congress Commission for Peace and Concord Law project)
to Congress, and free some of the political prisoners.
But still, Fox and his government claimed that
they'd done all they could to satisfy the Zapatistas and that if peace wasn't
signed, it was due to Marcos' intransigence and the fact that he pursued
different interests than those of the Indians.
A mass media campaign was mounted to defame the
Zapatistas, including a massive rock concert with two of Mexico's most popular
rock bands singing for "peace."
But the peace the Zapatistas want is quite different
from the peace Fox wants. For the Zapatistas, peace is not only the end
of the guerrilla struggle, but also of the daily manslaughter that capitalism
carries out in most of Mexico's rural areas, where people die from malnutrition
and curable illnesses.
After a week in Mexico City, the Zapatistas participated
in many political events, including a visit to the National University (UNAM),
which held a strike for nine months past year. The Zapatistas then announced
that, due to the lack of will for peace that the government showed, they
would return to Chiapas.
The key to this was the refusal by Congress to
grant a hearing to the Zapatistas so that they could argue in favor of the
Cocopa Law project. This refusal was led by the National Action Party representatives,
among them the party's moral leader, Diego Fernandez de Ceballos, a lawyer
who has accused the Zapatistas of being criminals, the feminist women of
going against natural order, and the working masses of being "descalzonados,"
so poor they can't buy pants.
This right-wing politician, along with his party
and some of PRI's (former ruling party for 70 years) representatives, claimed
that only Congress members and ministers could talk in Congress -and otherwise
we would sink in anarchy.
The Zapatistas, in a master move, held a meeting
outside Congress to say farewell to their sympathizers in the capital. The
result was marvelous; about 15,000 people showed up, and as seven of the
23 Indian commanders called for a national and international organization
for fighting for all poor and working people, Congress voted in favor of
giving the Zapatistas a hearing.
By a close margin, the PRI and the center-left
PRD, the Green Party, and the Workers Party voted for it, and only National
Action voted against.
Now, for the first time in history, an Indian guerrilla
will address Congress to speak about the problems of one of the most important
and active social groups in Mexico. This will be a step not only to a solution
of the Zapatista conflict, but will also strengthen the mass movements.
Socialist Action /April 2001 |