The Fighting Campesinos of San Salvador Atenco
Revolutionary Worker #1160, July 28, 2002, http://www.rwor.org 

San Salvador Atenco, Mexico--For four days in July, the world got a
glimpse of the just struggle of peasant farmers in Mexico. The
campesinos of San Salvador Atenco, about 30 km (19 miles) outside of
Mexico City, have been fighting against the government's attempts to
seize their land in order to build a new international airport. This
struggle came to a head earlier this month, when the people of San
Salvador Atenco stood their ground against thousands of government
police and troops.

An entire community of peasants declared themselves "ready for
whatever comes" as they prepared for the confrontation. From Friday,
July 12, to Monday, July 15, the town was surrounded by 3,000 Federal
Preventive Police and a detachment of the Mexican Armed Forces. The
community was holding 15 government officials and police agents
captive in order to exchange them for the release of 14 compa=F1eros who
were arrested in a police attack on a march on July 11.

TV news cameras focused first on the lines and lines of heavily armed
police surrounding the community. Then the cameras swung around to the
sun-wizened faces of peasants--women and men-- holding their machetes
high, and the masked youth setting up barricades, making Molotov
cocktails and collecting materials to be used in self-defense.

The people said, "We expect an attack at any moment." Sergio Vasquez
Diaz, a third- generation ejidatario (a farmer on a ejido , or
communal land) declared, "We've said it before and we'll say it again,
we will defend our land with our lives. They are killing our people,
our families. We don't know which of us is going to fall, nor which of
them from the government...but this is the stand we're taking."

And then...the government backed down and the town celebrated!

Taking Captivesand Blocking Highways









The government siege of San Salvador Atenco began after a
confrontation between the people and the police on Thursday, July 11.
A group of 40 peasants set off on a march to a protest in another town
where the governor of the state of Mexico was giving a speech. They
were surrounded and attacked by hundreds of police. About 100 more
peasants came to join the fight. Thirty peasants were beaten to the
ground and arrested, including one well-known activist who was beaten
by 20 police at once.

Those who escaped and made it back to town set off firecrackers and
rang the bell in the plaza to sound the alarm and call everyone out.
The people burned three police cars and blocked the highway using
three Coca-Cola tractor-trailers.

Peasants from surrounding pueblos who heard about the battle on the
radio built roadblocks at the highway and surrounding roads. Three
hundred people marched to the court in Texcoco, to demand the release
of one of the leaders being held there.

When the authorities refused to release the leader, the people seized
seven government officials, including the prosecuting attorney of the
region of Texcoco. The campesinos took the captives back to the pueblo
to hold them in order to negotiate the release of their compa=F1eros.

Later, the people found some police infiltrators posing as journalists
and added them to those detained. Peasants from 16 surrounding pueblos
joined the people of Atenco to block the highways and roads that
connect the communities with Mexico City. Over 1,000 tractor-trailer
cargo trucks were stuck in an enormous traffic jam.

Activists from Mexico City, including veterans of the student strike
at UNAM (the National Autonomous University of Mexico), went to the
area to join the struggle. Social organizations in the southern states
of Oaxaca, Yucatan, Guerrero, and Michoacan declared their intentions
to close down the highways in their states in solidarity with the
struggle of the peasants in the state of Mexico.

Government Forcedto Back Down









The struggle of the people forced the Mexican government to eat its
words. At the start of the confrontation, arrogant statements issued
from Mexico City had declared that "the government will only negotiate
with those who are legitimate, and breaking the law is not
legitimate." Secretary of the Interior Santiago Creel reassured the
billion-dollar investment interests behind the construction of the
airport that "the government will not permit the upsurge of violence
in the country" and would act with a "firm hand" against the rebel
peasants. The governor of the state of Mexico declared, "There would
be no exchange of detainees for hostages."

But the police agents and government officials detained by the people
were only released after the 14 arrested peasants were released on
bail paid by the state of Mexico. This represents an important victory
in the ongoing struggle of the people of Atenco.

At midnight on Sunday, July 14, the imprisoned peasants were freed.
Three of the peasants had been beaten so badly in the police attack
that they are still hospitalized. The freed peasants face charges of
riot, attack on state roadways, illegal deprivation of liberty,
robbery, and others.

Once the freed peasants were back in the community early Monday
morning, the 15 detainees were taken to the first roadblock and turned
over to the authorities. The Federal Preventive Police marched away,
and the burned police cars were moved out of the roadway.

Some truck drivers who had been stuck in traffic jams for two days had
written corridos about the battle of Atenco, and they performed the
songs for the TV cameras.

The government announced that it would negotiate the conflict with the
community, and Mexican president Vicente Fox has suggested that the
government might move the airport project to another location. At the
moment, the land expropriation issue is in the hands of the Supreme
Court. Whatever happens, the bold actions of the campesinos have made
it clear that the struggle of the people will be a major factor!

Months of Militant Resistance









Last October, the government announced the expropriation order for the
land at San Salvador Atenco to build a new international airport.
Since then, the peasants of Atenco have electrified Mexico with their
militant resistance.

Under the government decree, 4,375 families in 13 farming communities
would have to abandon their land. The land is primarily ejido, or
communal farm land, granted to the community through reforms after the
1910 Mexican revolution. According to the government plans, the ejido
land would be replaced by a huge 11,000-acre airport with six runways.

In November 2001, in an action that resembled a scene out of the 1910
revolution, thousands of peasants on horseback and on foot marched to
Mexico City and entered the city at nightfall, carrying flaming
torches and machetes held high. They marched through the upscale area
and past the embassy row where the Yankee embassy is located. They
fought with police who cowered behind shields as they tried to prevent
the marchers from reaching the central plaza, the Z=F3calo. Their
banners read, "If they want blows, there will be blows, we are not
intimidated. The peasants of today are combative, and we have stood up
to fight against the airport. We represent rebel dignity."

Some of the ejidatarios took the struggle to the courts and obtained a
restraining order to postpone the seizure of the land while the courts
determined the legality of the expropriation order. Many peasants have
little faith in the courts, however. As one campesino said, "More than
a court order, we want them to leave the land in peace, because we
want it for the rest of our lives."

On New Year's Eve the peasants declared San Salvador Atenco a
"municipality in rebellion." In January the peasants set up nighttime
guards and built barricades at the roads leading into the town to
protect themselves against police incursions and government engineers.
Police attempting to cross through the territory have been disarmed.
In April a group of engineers was held by the peasants until they
turned over their blueprints and plans, much of which the government
has tried to keep secret.

In an attempt to bribe the peasants to abandon their land and make way
for the $2 billion dollar airport, the Fox government offered the
farmers 7 pesos (about 65 cents) per square meter for their land. Fox
said that the people living in the area "had won the lottery" because
they would be given jobs as porters and janitors in the new airport.

But the campesinos aren't going for such arguments. One man pointed
out, "Most of the ejidatarios are between 45 and 84 years old. What
work can we do? Who will employ us? Are we really trained for a job in
an airport? In order to work as a floor sweeper in a company these
days they demand a high school diploma, and we barely know how to read
and write."

Another peasant stated, "It's not right that after being owners we
would end up as second class employees." A 70-year-old ejidatario with
10 children and a small plot of land said, "The land is priceless and
besides I will not sell it." When asked how much he makes off his land
a month he answered, "We don't make money off of it. The land is our
sustenance. Here we live day to day." One peasant stated on
television, "Even if they offered us millions for our land we would
not accept it."

People's Lives vs. Capitalist "Progress"









The communities in the area that would be covered up by the airport
have roots that reach back to the ancient indigenous Nahua people. One
community, San Cristobal Nexquipayac, still extracts salt from the
land using Nahua techniques and is the location of anthropologically
important mounds from before the Spanish conquest. In San Salvador
Atenco, the people weave a type of belt invented by "tamemes" or Nahua
boat loaders. The peasants sell the belts in nearby markets. (These
days the thread used in the weaving comes from unraveling scraps of
blue jean cloth thrown out by the maquiladoras, the factories owned by
foreign capitalist corporations.) None of this culture or history of
the people is important to those who want to wipe out peasant
communities in the name of what the Mexican rulers and imperialists
call "progress."

The airport has been promoted as the biggest economic project of Fox's
presidential term. The government sees a new, large international
airport near the capital as a key part of the plans to further
"modernize" Mexico by opening the doors wider to imperialist
investment and capitalist globalization.

But the government schemes have run straight into the determined
opposition of the peasants. In addition, environmentalists have
pointed to the dangers of building such an airport in the Texcoco
region. Among other problems, a huge airport would increase air
contamination in an area where this is already a life-threatening
problem. Airport construction would also affect the water table and
increase the already severe problem with flooding in Mexico City.

The decision to build the airport in this area was connected to the
spoils system involving ruling- class forces of the PAN and PRI. With
Fox as president, the PAN controls the executive branch of the central
government. Meanwhile, the state of Mexico is in the hands of the
former ruling party, the PRI. And the financial interests of the
family of Hank Gonzalez (now deceased, Gonzalez was on the Fortune
magazine list of 500 richest individuals in the world) and his cronies
in the Grupo Atlacolmulco will greatly benefit from the building of
the airport in this region.

The struggle over land is intensifying all over Mexico. Expropriation
of peasant lands is occurring throughout the country as the government
barrels ahead with development plans in service of imperialist
"modernization" and globalization. Peasants from all over Mexico are
organizing to fight these development plans and are being joined by
democratic teachers, former UNAM student activists, and many social
groups.

Another huge development scheme set in motion by the government is
known as Plan Puebla- Panama. If implemented, this plan will destroy
the land and culture of indigenous regions not only in the
southeastern part of Mexico but also the seven countries of Central
America.

An Upsurge of Struggle









The rebellion of the peasants of San Salvador Atenco has sparked a
righteous upsurge of struggle among the people and has become an
important example of determined resistance against the rulers of
Mexico and their U.S. imperialist godfathers.

The police and the troops are gone for now from San Salvador Atenco.
On Tuesday, July 16, the federal government met with a delegation of
rebel peasants who had just come from a protest/victory celebration at
Los Pi=F1os, the Mexican equivalent of the White House. Further meetings
to negotiate a settlement were scheduled.

The government's position and the community's position are very far
apart at present. The peasants' starting point is that the government
must cancel the expropriation decree and relocate their airport
project. They are demanding that all charges against the arrested be
dropped. One peasant leader said, "We have't come to negotiate for
money. We have come for the cancellation of the project to build an
airport in our pueblo."

The government is offering a higher price for the land in an effort to
get the peasants to move out. At the same time, Francisco Curi Perez,
the government's top negotiator with the rebel peasants, put out his
Mafia version of "justice": "To me it seems unjust that an important
group like this one [the peasants in struggle] could act as a chain
around the great majority of people that could benefit from a project
that would give opportunity to their children. It is enough to look at
the social indicators to conclude that if there is not a way out, the
region will be condemned to the third or fourth world."

Mexico's rulers claim that by defending their land, the peasants of
San Salvador Atenco are condemning themselves and others to poverty.
And such predatory logic is accompanied by the threat of the armed
forces of the state.

Expressing the stand of the people of San Salvador Atenco, one peasant
said, "This movement is like an electric current, and here the first
light has come on. The government is failing in its strategies because
to try to throw us off our lands they condemn us to death. That's why
we say that from this day forward more lights will be turned on."

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