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Mexico teachers clash with police in historic city
14 Jun 2006 14:55:06 GMT
Source: Reuters

 OAXACA, Mexico, June 14 (Reuters) - Mexican police forced out thousands of
striking teachers camped in the heart of this historic city on Wednesday in
the latest clash between protesters and government forces ahead of July
elections.

Local radio said two people were killed and one was injured, although the
report was not confirmed. Witnesses and press reports said shots were fired.

Before dawn, police on foot and in helicopters used tear gas to disperse the
teachers, who have occupied Oaxaca City's main plaza and surrounding streets
for 20 days to press their demand for higher wages. Colonial, highland
Oaxaca City is the capital of the southern state of the same name.

Two police officers were being held hostage by teachers, said state
officials.

President Vicente Fox's spokesman Ruben Aguilar said the incident, like
May's riots in a town near Mexico City and a bitter, prolonged mining
strike, was not a sign of instability around the July 2 presidential vote.

"In no way does the government consider them hot spots or insoluble
problems, much less do they put at risk the electoral process," he told
reporters.

State police guarded the leafy plaza on Wednesday and burned tents and other
camping equipment, while teachers hid in hotels around the historic center,
a Reuters reporter saw. They vowed to continue the strike, which the federal
and state government says is illegal and unjustified.

"We must resist, we are used to ... years of struggle and to the repressive
government," Enrique Rueda Pacheco, head of the teachers' union, told local
radio.

The teachers are at odds with Gov. Ulises Ruiz, a powerful member of the
Institutional Revolutionary Party which ruled Mexico for most of the last
century.

Last month outside Mexico City, international and Mexican rights groups say
police used repressive tactics to put down riots in San Salvador de Atenco.
The demonstrators had opposed efforts to evict illegal flower vendors.

This week, several officers were punished for the brutal crackdown in which
more than 200 people were arrested.

Earlier this year, two steel workers were killed in running battles with
police sent in to break up a strike, part of a long work stoppage by miners
and metal workers nationwide.


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