Socialist Action /September 2002

Zapatista Supporters Ambushed
By GERRY FOLEY
Murderous attacks and threats against supporters of the Zapatista National
Liberation Movement in the state of Chiapas have been reported in the Mexico
City daily La Jornada.
In its Aug. 27 issue, Herman Bellinghausen, the paper's correspondent
in Chiapas, reported that paramilitaries organized by the PRI, the former
ruling party in Mexico, killed two Zapatista supporters and wounded another
seven, one seriously, at the Rancheria Amaytik, not far from a major Mexican
army camp.
The local Zapatista self-government council characterized the incident
as an ambush. The self-government bodies declared: "The bad government,
together with its paramilitaries, is carrying out its death threats against
our people-who are putting up a dignified resistance."
The local civil rights organizations issued a joint statement demanding,
among other things, "that the government take its distance from the
PRI armed and/or paramilitary groups operating in the region." The
human rights organization Fray Pedro Lorezno de la Nada, based in Ocosingo,
reported extensive army movements in the region. About half of the Mexican
army has been stationed in Chiapas since the 1994 Zapatista-led uprising.
In its Aug. 22 issue, La Jornada reported a mobilization of about
200 PRI paramilitaries aiming to terrorize Zapatista self-governing villages
and break a Zapatista blockade against traffic in cheap alcohol. Forewarned,
the Zapatistas were able to withdraw and limit the number of casualties,
although one man was seriously wounded.
On Aug. 6, La Jornada reported an accusation by the leader of
the survivors of the massacre of Acteal (in which five years ago PRI paramilitaries
slaughtered 45 women and children belonging to the pacifist group Las Abejas)
that the Mexican government had dropped any pretense of pursuing persons
charged with involvement in the outrage.
The survivors' leader, Jose Vasquez Gutierrez, said that many of those
implicated in the massacre remained free in their homes and had rearmed
themselves. He warned that if the state or federal police do not act, there
could be a new attack at any moment on an independent organization like
Las Abejas. The latter group is not linked to the Zapatistas, but has sought
to remain neutral.
The old conservative opposition party, the National Action Party (PAN),
managed to capture the federal government from the PRI, which had held it
for more than half a century, largely by promising more democracy. This
obviously had to include offering a political solution to the dispute in
Chiapas, where rebellious Indian communities have kept the government repressive
forces at bay since their insurrection in 1994.
The rebellion led by the Zapatista National Liberation Army became the
banner of opposition to the pro-imperialist bourgeois "neoliberal"
offensive in Mexico. Hundreds of thousands of Mexican working people mobilized
to defend insurgents against military and police repression. They prevented
the PRI government from moving directly to reoccupy the rebel areas and
crush the rebellion.
But both openly through the army and surreptitiously through its paramilitaries,
the PRI and the reactionary landlords it represents kept up the pressure
on the Zapatista-controlled area. It is clear now that the change of government
at the federal level has not changed this situation. It is essential that
national and international solidarity be maintained with the deprived and
hard-pressed Indian people of Chiapas.
Socialist Action /September 2002 |