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From: "Dana Aldea" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: NN,Section 22, with APPO Support, Prepares for its Annual Strike,Apr 25
Date: Fri, 27 Apr 2007 15:00:13 +0200

In Oaxaca, the Show Goes On
Teachers Union Section 22, with APPO Support, Prepares for its Annual Strike

By Nancy Davies
Commentary from Oaxaca
April 25, 2007

A Mexican film company is shooting a movie here in Oaxaca. On Alcala', the
pedestrian street, cameras, booms, and lighting shift around to create each
scene. The backdrop moves. Someone from the film crew painted on a granite
wall an advertisement for "El Circo," to create ambience.

Damn, this feels like an allegory. Each time the lights (Noticias newspaper)
flash onto another fragment -here goes a young man running; he's waving a
girl's pink sweater - I ask myself what does this mean, what part of the
story-line are we seeing, is he a good guy or a bad guy? He's got nice buns.
I stand on the corner admiring the backside of this young fellow as he
dashes across the street and I wonder what the hell is going on.

This week's Noticias (how many times have I extrapolated a news report?)
began with two human rights forums, official and popular. The popular
tribunal convicted Ulises Ruiz (URO) of crimes against humanity and demanded
the release of the forty or so prisoners still held. Both forums declared
that the government violates human rights. Both referred to the most recent
arrest cum torture episode, on April 14, of David Venegas a university
student. Most significant for the future is the popular tribunal's call to
indict URO, something that could happen only if the PRI (the Institutional
Revolutionary Party) wipes out in the August elections.

The tribunal, constituted during the second Forum for Human Rights in Oaxaca
a couple of months ago, referred to the "atrocities ordered by Ruiz Ortiz,"
which characterize a government of "ignominy and unheard of barbarism"
carried out "in complicity with collaborators, deputies, judges, and police
forces."

Thus for the moment Oaxaca events roll as predictably as a car chase scene.
First the government snatches an APPO (Popular Assembly of the Peoples of
Oaxaca) person. The victim eventually shows up in prison, having been
tortured. Noticias covers the story. The APPO marches. The governor puts out
the riot police to prevent access to the zo'calo or Santo Domingo. The march
goes elsewhere. Noticias covers the story: photos of marchers.

Segue to Andre's Manuel Lopez Obrador. The "legitimate" president is touring
Oaxaca advising the PRD (the Democratic Revolution Party to which he
belongs) to clean up its act, fraud being the worst plague in Mexico's
political history. It's a good message, if it works. A new political party
has formed, geared toward women and youth. It's called Partido Alternativa
Social Democra'tica y Campesina (PASC). It is included in a coalition of the
PRD, Convergencia and other smaller parties who will try for the "punishment
vote" in August.

A new APPO convened on behalf of twenty towns in the Sierra Sur, with all
the demands of the central APPO plus their own local ones.

Now, let's cut to the forthcoming chase: Section 22 of the teachers union
has decided that on May 1 (Labor Day in the world outside the USA) the
teachers will march to the zo'calo. How that confrontation will play out I
have no idea. Tueday's Noticias ran the previews of coming attractions - an
article saying that the municipal and state police will be firmly entrenched
behind barricades at the entrances. A May Day march to the zo'calo would be
the first direct challenge to the governor since the November crackdown.
Oaxaca Center on Labor Day has traditionally hosted all the labor unions
marching with bands, displays of gymnastics on flatbed trucks, flags,
politicians, and students.

The students and graduates, in a bulletin published by the Socialist party,
call for a mobilization with the APPO. They declare, in part, that fewer
than 20 percent of the graduates of higher education find work related to
their professional studies. Instead they end up in telemarketing, private
classes, administrative work, as vendors, taxi drivers, waiters, and with
other similar jobs. Others choose to emigrate. About 250 thousand young
people with high school or higher educations are unemployed.

The bulletin goes on to assert that the problem is the government, which
instead of investing resources in education, health, social security,
infrastructure, culture, science and technology, spends those monies in
paying interest on the debt, in bank rescues and for other corrupt
businesses, as well as the highest salaries and pensions for bureaucrats, on
arms, police and military. The big student march will take place in Mexico
City.

At the same time a teacher work stoppage will take place in Huatulco on the
Oaxaca southern coast. They are preparing a strike for two days, largely in
protest against the decimation of social security. With the new law,
President Felipe Caldero'n and the Congress eliminated across the board
benefits in the pension system of government workers (that includes
teachers, who are federal employees), known as the ISSSTE. Those in this
system no longer can count on a life pension based on their work history.
Now, pensions will be individual and determined exclusively by the savings
that the employee put aside during his employment. Furthermore, the
government rose the age at which pensions can be withdrawn, effective in ten
years: 58 for women and 60 for men. Privatization will go forward by the
government, for health care.

The teachers will stop work for the first and second of May as part of the
national civil strike called for by the Coordinating Committee of the
National Education Workers (CNTE). The secretary of Section 22 of SNTE,
Ezequiel Rosales Carre~o, informed the press that the work suspension was
approved in an assembly carried out Saturday night, April 21, in Santa Mari'a
Huatulco. Besides leaving 1,300,000 Oaxaca students without classes, the
teachers will parade in the streets and block the highways. They will also
close the offices of the ISSSTE, with the backing of the APPO. Rosales
Carre~o doesn't discount the possibility of an indefinite strike if the
government doesn't attend to the teachers' demands.

We are in fact coming up on the annual May teachers-strike time, and this
year will be, in the words of the archbishop of Antequera-Oaxaca, Jose' Luis
Cha'vez Botello, "very lamentable" if the teachers succeed in doing what they
did last year. The most lamentable, in my opinion, is that there is now a
contra-union, Section 59, supported by the governor and officially
recognized. Furthermore, the secretary of Section 22 of SNTE, Enrique Rueda
Pacheco, is legally still in office, since Section 22 refused to accept his
resignation without an accounting. That makes for legal complications which
URO will undoubtedly take advantage of.

Meanwhile, Section 22 continues to demand the resignation or ouster of URO,
so there will be a march in Oaxaca on May 15: Teachers' Day. On June 14, the
first anniversary of the attack on the teachers' encampment, a mobilization
will mark the anniversary. The (acting) Section 22 secretary stated that any
negotiation will be done with the federal Secretary of Government, because
the governor is no longer recognized. The possibility of a general strike
remains, since there is no solution for the demands for re-zonification of
salaries.

For the students, as future workers, the struggle is important, so they will
add themselves to the strike on May 2, holding conferences, meetings, and
discussions in schools. They plan to carry out marches and block highways
with the assistance of the APPO.

And as a final note, the eighteen-year-old son of the American Consul was
robbed and stabbed in his side. Surgery was required; he will probably be
okay. Mark Leyes, the consul for the United States for several years, said
that it could have happened to anyone. (The boy holds dual citizenship.)
Leyes stated, "There were no threats, no message for the media, just three
young guys dressed in black who attacked him, beat him up and fled."

Last week the United States State Department renewed its warning about
visiting Oaxaca because of the climate of violence caused by the
political-social conflict. Leyes denied that the assault on his son had
anything to do with the political-social conflict. Just a common crime, like
many others. The disco is called El Circo. To my recollection it recently
was cited in Noticias for its lack of police supervision and the ongoing
presence of drug dealers and prostitutes.

I was told that the movie is about musicians, and is entitled "The
Magnificent Seven."

http://www.narconews.com/Issue45/article2639.html

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