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Date: Mon, 16 Oct 2006 12:03:23 -0500 (CDT)
From: Global Exchange - Mexico News <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: En;Paramilitary attacks continue in Oaxaca

Paramilitary attacks continue in Oaxaca
by John Gibler; October 15, 2006

    In the past week, gunmen have killed one and wounded four protesters
from the Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca (APPO). The recent
killings heightened tensions as the conflict again enters into a critical
moment with the Minister of the Interior threatening to withdraw the
federal government's settlement offer if teachers do not end their strike
by Monday, October 16.

    Meanwhile, the Mexican Senate is poised to make a definitive decision
this Tuesday, October 17, on the APPO's central demand that the state
government be dissolved.

    The teachers union, Section 22 of the National Union of Education
Workers, stated that they will not return to classes on Monday, but will
wait for the Senate's decision the following day.

    The conflict in Oaxaca began as a teachers' strike five months ago,
but exploded into a massive, statewide civil disobedience up-rising after
a failed attempt to violently lift the striking teachers' protest camp
during the pre-dawn hours of June 14.

    Since then the teachers union and the APPO, which formed in response
to the failed police raid and groups together hundreds of local
 organizations, have held onto their occupation of Oaxaca's historic
central plaza; blocked state government office buildings; painted most of
the city with graffiti calling for Governor Ulises Ruiz's ousting; led a
march of several thousand people over 250 miles from Oaxaca to Mexico
City; taken over television and radio stations; and built thousands of
barricades throughout the city.

    Since August gunmen and civilian-clad police have shot at protesters
in marches and at their camps, killing six people and wounding fifteen.
Paramilitaries have also abducted movement leaders and participants and
held them incommunicado for days before being taken to jail or released.
Those abducted testified to having been tortured with visible scars still
covering their faces and bodies. (See 'Pistol Policy' ZNet, August 16,
2006)

    The recent shootings began on October 11, the day that a
"sub-commission" of three senators from the Senate Committee on the
Interior was scheduled to arrive in Oaxaca City to analyze whether or not
the state government has ceased to function. Since June 14, Section 22
and the APPO have conditioned all their demands upon the renunciation or
ousting of the Governor. Ruiz has refused to resign, and the only legal
mechanism for the protesters to force his ousting is to request that the
Senate declare that the state government has already, in effect,
disappeared, a process known as the "desaparicion de poderes" in Spanish.
Hence the APPO's strategy has been to "create ungovernability" by
blocking government buildings and shutting off highways and roads.

    In anticipation of the sub-commission's visit, APPO protesters
commandeered four city buses on October 11 and drove throughout the city
in "mobile brigades" to take over more state government offices and cover
walls, buildings, road signs, other buses, and pretty much any available
surface with graffiti calling for Governor's ousting. The protesters had
nearly concluded their mobile brigade when, shortly after 4 in the
afternoon, outside a police station, un-uniformed police and gunmen shot
into a crowd of protesters who were preparing to get back on their bus
and move on.

    The gunmen fired for several minutes, wounding four people, who were
taken to the hospital and released later that evening. A photographer for
the local newspaper, Noticias, and the national newspaper, Excelsior,
captured clear images of one of the gunmen firing into the crowd. Gunmen
fired over 60 rounds, forcing the protesters to seek shelter under fire.
Three hours later a caravan of police trucks arrived to "rescue" the
gunmen, allowing them to escape without being apprehended by the APPO
protesters. As a result of the violence, the sub-commission suspended
their visit until the following day.

    The senators' visit was an exercise in contradictions. Inside the
empty state legislature, surrounded by a few hundred protesters, state
legislators told the federal sub-commission that they had not stopped
working and had passed four laws in the past five months of the conflict.

    The Governor, accompanied by his entire cabinet, testified that he
had continued to work "as normal," and presented the sub-commission with
box-loads of documents to support his claim. Most poignant however, was
the location of the Governor's meeting with the sub-commission: a gated
and guarded hangar at the Oaxaca City airport a few miles out of town.
Ulises Ruiz has not been able to walk freely in the capital city since
the June 14 raid.

    During a four-hour meeting with organizations from the APPO, people
gave testimony about the police raid and paramilitary violence. Instead
of handing over boxes of documents, the protesters submitted bullet
shells, exploded gas grenades, and police batons and helmets that they
have gathered during the months of conflict as proof of the impunity with
which the state government and paramilitaries beaten, shot, and killed
protesters.

    The senators repeated in the meetings with state government officials
and protesters that they would not be "deciding" to dissolve the state
government, but merely reporting their findings as to whether the
government had already lost control or not. The sub-commission will turn
their report into the Senate Committee on the Interior on Monday, October
16. The full Senate will vote on the matter on Tuesday, October 17.

    In this context, the Minister or the Interior threatened to withdraw
the offer to increase teachers' payments and open the way for
institutional reforms in Oaxaca if the Section 22 does not return to
classes by October 16. The teachers responded that they would wait for
the Senate vote. The Minister or the Interior's ultimatum once again
fueled rumors that a federal crackdown is imminent.

    Then, at about 2:30 in the morning on Saturday, October 14, soldiers
in civilian clothes who tried to make their way through a barricade on
the outskirts of the center of town, opened fire on APPO protesters
guarding the barricade. One soldier, 22 year-old Johnatan Ri'os Va'zquez,
dropped his wallet before fleeing, thus leading to his identification and
later apprehension by local police.

    Ri'os Va'zquez fired upon the protesters with a 22-caliber pistol,
hitting Alejandro Garci'a Herna'ndez twice in the head. Garci'a
Herna'ndez, a nearby resident who nightly took coffee to the APPO
protesters guarding the barricades, was serving coffee with his wife and
son when the soldiers opened fire.

    "My father was bleeding from the head. I held him and they kept
shooting, but now at me," his son Johnatan Halil told a reporter from the
Mexico City newspaper La Jornada. "A compa~ero [Joaqui'n Beni'tez] jumped
in the way to protect me. That is why they shot him in the shoulder."

    Garci'a Herna'ndez languished in the hospital for over 8 hours
without receiving medical attention. When the surgeons finally attempted
to aid him, he had already gone brain dead. He died a few hours later.
Garci'a Herna'ndez was the sixth person to die in paramilitary shootings
against protesters in Oaxaca.

    This number does not include one teacher who opposed the strike,
Jaime Rene Calva Aragon, who was hacked to death with ice axes two weeks
ago. His colleagues immediately blamed the Section 22 and the APPO, while
these organizations denied the accusations, in turn blaming Ulises Ruiz
for trying to create the conditions necessary for a federal intervention.
While APPO protesters have beaten people caught stealing in the city
center and, on one occasion, a local journalist, there have been no cases
of premeditated or targeted violence against strike opponents.

    The coming days will be decisive for the conflict in Oaxaca, with the
federal government withdrawing their settlement offer with one hand and
voting on the dissolution of the state government with the other. The
APPO has called for national strikes and marches in solidarity with the
Oaxaca movement. On Sunday, October 15, some 40 members of the APPO will
begin a hunger strike to be carried out until Ulises Ruiz leaves office.
The hunger strikers will join a protest camp in front of the Senate in
Mexico City where several thousand teachers arrived on foot from Oaxaca
this past Monday, October 9.

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GLOBAL EXCHANGE (http://www.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp)
     Paramilitary attacks continue in Oaxaca
 by John Gibler; October 15, 2006

     In the past week, gunmen have killed one and wounded four protesters from 
the Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca (APPO). The recent killings 
heightened tensions as the conflict again enters into a critical moment with 
the Minister of the Interior threatening to withdraw the federal government's 
settlement offer if teachers do not end their strike by Monday, October 16.

     Meanwhile, the Mexican Senate is poised to make a definitive decision this 
Tuesday, October 17, on the APPO's central demand that the state government be 
dissolved.

     The teachers union, Section 22 of the National Union of Education Workers, 
stated that they will not return to classes on Monday, but will wait for the 
Senate's decision the following day.

     The conflict in Oaxaca began as a teachers' strike five months ago, but 
exploded into a massive, statewide civil disobedience up-rising after a failed 
attempt to violently lift the striking teachers' protest camp during the 
pre-dawn hours of June 14.

     Since then the teachers union and the APPO, which formed in response to 
the failed police raid and groups together hundreds of local organizations, 
have held onto their occupation of Oaxaca's historic central plaza; blocked 
state government office buildings; painted most of the city with graffiti 
calling for Governor Ulises Ruiz's ousting; led a march of several thousand 
people over 250 miles from Oaxaca to Mexico City; taken over television and 
radio stations; and built thousands of barricades throughout the city.

     Since August gunmen and civilian-clad police have shot at protesters in 
marches and at their camps, killing six people and wounding fifteen. 
Paramilitaries have also abducted movement leaders and participants and held 
them incommunicado for days before being taken to jail or released. Those 
abducted testified to having been tortured with visible scars still covering 
their faces and bodies. (See 'Pistol Policy' ZNet, August 16, 2006)

     The recent shootings began on October 11, the day that a "sub-commission" 
of three senators from the Senate Committee on the Interior was scheduled to 
arrive in Oaxaca City to analyze whether or not the state government has ceased 
to function. Since June 14, Section 22 and the APPO have conditioned all their 
demands upon the renunciation or ousting of the Governor. Ruiz has refused to 
resign, and the only legal mechanism for the protesters to force his ousting is 
to request that the Senate declare that the state government has already, in 
effect, disappeared, a process known as the "desaparicion de poderes" in 
Spanish. Hence the APPO's strategy has been to "create ungovernability" by 
blocking government buildings and shutting off highways and roads.

     In anticipation of the sub-commission's visit, APPO protesters 
commandeered four city buses on October 11 and drove throughout the city in 
"mobile brigades" to take over more state government offices and cover walls, 
buildings, road signs, other buses, and pretty much any available surface with 
graffiti calling for Governor's ousting. The protesters had nearly concluded 
their mobile brigade when, shortly after 4 in the afternoon, outside a police 
station, un-uniformed police and gunmen shot into a crowd of protesters who 
were preparing to get back on their bus and move on.

     The gunmen fired for several minutes, wounding four people, who were taken 
to the hospital and released later that evening. A photographer for the local 
newspaper, Noticias, and the national newspaper, Excelsior, captured clear 
images of one of the gunmen firing into the crowd. Gunmen fired over 60 rounds, 
forcing the protesters to seek shelter under fire. Three hours later a caravan 
of police trucks arrived to "rescue" the gunmen, allowing them to escape 
without being apprehended by the APPO protesters. As a result of the violence, 
the sub-commission suspended their visit until the following day.

     The senators' visit was an exercise in contradictions. Inside the empty 
state legislature, surrounded by a few hundred protesters, state legislators 
told the federal sub-commission that they had not stopped working and had 
passed four laws in the past five months of the conflict.

     The Governor, accompanied by his entire cabinet, testified that he had 
continued to work "as normal," and presented the sub-commission with box-loads 
of documents to support his claim. Most poignant however, was the location of 
the Governor's meeting with the sub-commission: a gated and guarded hangar at 
the Oaxaca City airport a few miles out of town. Ulises Ruiz has not been able 
to walk freely in the capital city since the June 14 raid.

     During a four-hour meeting with organizations from the APPO, people gave 
testimony about the police raid and paramilitary violence. Instead of handing 
over boxes of documents, the protesters submitted bullet shells, exploded gas 
grenades, and police batons and helmets that they have gathered during the 
months of conflict as proof of the impunity with which the state government and 
paramilitaries beaten, shot, and killed protesters.

     The senators repeated in the meetings with state government officials and 
protesters that they would not be "deciding" to dissolve the state government, 
but merely reporting their findings as to whether the government had already 
lost control or not. The sub-commission will turn their report into the Senate 
Committee on the Interior on Monday, October 16. The full Senate will vote on 
the matter on Tuesday, October 17.

     In this context, the Minister or the Interior threatened to withdraw the 
offer to increase teachers' payments and open the way for institutional reforms 
in Oaxaca if the Section 22 does not return to classes by October 16. The 
teachers responded that they would wait for the Senate vote. The Minister or 
the Interior's ultimatum once again fueled rumors that a federal crackdown is 
imminent.

     Then, at about 2:30 in the morning on Saturday, October 14, soldiers in 
civilian clothes who tried to make their way through a barricade on the 
outskirts of the center of town, opened fire on APPO protesters guarding the 
barricade. One soldier, 22 year-old Johnatan Ri'os Va'zquez, dropped his wallet 
before fleeing, thus leading to his identification and later apprehension by 
local police.

     Ri'os Va'zquez fired upon the protesters with a 22-caliber pistol, hitting 
Alejandro Garci'a Herna'ndez twice in the head. Garci'a Herna'ndez, a nearby 
resident who nightly took coffee to the APPO protesters guarding the 
barricades, was serving coffee with his wife and son when the soldiers opened 
fire.

     "My father was bleeding from the head. I held him and they kept shooting, 
but now at me," his son Johnatan Halil told a reporter from the Mexico City 
newspaper La Jornada. "A compa~ero [Joaqui'n Beni'tez] jumped in the way to 
protect me. That is why they shot him in the shoulder."

     Garci'a Herna'ndez languished in the hospital for over 8 hours without 
receiving medical attention. When the surgeons finally attempted to aid him, he 
had already gone brain dead. He died a few hours later. Garci'a Herna'ndez was 
the sixth person to die in paramilitary shootings against protesters in Oaxaca.

     This number does not include one teacher who opposed the strike, Jaime 
Rene Calva Aragon, who was hacked to death with ice axes two weeks ago. His 
colleagues immediately blamed the Section 22 and the APPO, while these 
organizations denied the accusations, in turn blaming Ulises Ruiz for trying to 
create the conditions necessary for a federal intervention. While APPO 
protesters have beaten people caught stealing in the city center and, on one 
occasion, a local journalist, there have been no cases of premeditated or 
targeted violence against strike opponents.

     The coming days will be decisive for the conflict in Oaxaca, with the 
federal government withdrawing their settlement offer with one hand and voting 
on the dissolution of the state government with the other. The APPO has called 
for national strikes and marches in solidarity with the Oaxaca movement. On 
Sunday, October 15, some 40 members of the APPO will begin a hunger strike to 
be carried out until Ulises Ruiz leaves office. The hunger strikers will join a 
protest camp in front of the Senate in Mexico City where several thousand 
teachers arrived on foot from Oaxaca this past Monday, October 9.



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