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From: "Dana Aldea" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: ZNet,Impending Massacre in Chiapas, Chol de Tumbala,Oct 17
Date: Tue, 17 Oct 2006 21:49:24 +0200

Impending Massacre in Chiapas Mexico--Update

by Saskia Fischer
ZNet, October 17, 2006
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionIDY&ItemID202

San Cristobal de las Casas, Oct 11--Tension is mounting in this community
under siege, harassed by the constant sight and sound of low flying
government planes  and helicopters, and news of troops and paramilitaries
gathering at the outskirts of town. The word is that the Mexican Army will
invade any day now to forcibly remove the entire community.

While much attention has been focused on the struggle between poor
communities and the state authorities in Oaxaca, the Mexican government
continues to wage a low-intensity war against indigenous communities in the
very fertile and resource-rich state of Chiapas.

This particular battle is taking place in the village of Chol de Tumbala ,
an indigenous community in Northern Chiapas. The village is part of the
network of autonomous Zapatista municipalities in the state, this one named
El Trabajo. The Chols are about to face eviction, for the second time, from
the ancestral lands they have struggled over the past decade to get a legal
claim to. The lands, which once were covered with dense jungle, and
inhabited by the Chols, have over the past decades been deforested by vast
cattle ranches, and their valuable timber sold on world markets.

Today the San Cristobal based human rights organization, the Centro de
Derechos Humanos Fray Bartolome de las Casas (CDHFBLC), which monitors and
promotes the human rights of poor people in the region, made a public appeal
to the state government not to use force against the Zapatistas camped in
Chol de Tumbala. They also revealed that when they voiced their concerns to
officials over a week ago, they were told that the government was facing
pressure from the president of the ranchers, Pedro Fons, to reclaim the
land. They were assured that the police wanted to avoid a violent
confrontation. However, given the recent history of violence against the
villagers, the Center said that these assurances could not be taken for
granted.

The Chols battle to (re)establish a community on their ancestral lands in
Palenque municipality, began in 1988, when they submitted a formal petition
to the federal secretary of Agrarian Reform. Between the time the request
was published in 1990 and 1995, the federal and local authorities issued
numerous contradictory decisions, finally ruling against the Chols in
January of 1995. The land in question consists of 532 hectares. Once it
became clear that legal avenues were closed to them, that the government
would not act to protect their right to land and a living, the community
decided to take a bold stand and in their words liberate the land. In
September 1999, 30 families, members of different communities in the area,
and supporters of the EZLN, reoccupied these ancestral lands and set to work
building a future for their families and future generations.

On August 3, 2006, life in Chol de Tumbala was violently disrupted. At 10.30
in the morning, villagers were presented with an eviction notice from the
Federal Judge of Playas de Catanza, who told them they had 10 minutes to
vacate the land. At 11.30, vans carrying more than 260 people- among them
municipal police, public security forces and people dressed as civilians,
invaded the village and set about destroying it. They burned and bulldozed
the houses, and destroyed clothes, kitchen utensils, dishes and fruit trees,
before taking all the villagers' property, including the husked maize which
is the staple of their diet. Three villagers were imprisoned, forced to sign
documents saying they had left the land voluntarily, and then later
released. At this stage the government produced a list of prior owners of
the land.

At the behest of the Zapatista Junta de Buen Gobierno (Good Government), on
October 1st about 300 Zapatistas- among them men, women and children,
returned to the village to reoccupy the land. On the 3rd, the police began
flying helicopters over the area. However, a day later, after the CDHFBLC
had made public its concerns, the police withdrew- without any apparent
change in the situation. Also on the 3rd, a number of social justice and
civil rights organizations decided to travel to the village and set up a
peace camp there to ward off violence from the state and/or the ranchers.
They remain there at the time of writing.

Since 1994, when the Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN) launched
its campaign to fight for the rights of the indigenous peoples of Chiapas,
the Mexican government has deployed an array of tactics against the
Zapatistas and their supporters- from attempts to discredit the movement in
the press, to torture, rape, imprisonment and outright murder. Although the
people of Chiapas are poor, the state is a rich one, with valuable sources
of water, timber and cattle ranching. These lucrative industries however are
dominated by large landholders, latifundas. Together with the state and
federal governments, and their private armies of paramilitaries, these
landowners have waged war against the indigenous peoples of the state. One
of the most horrific example was the massacre of 45 people attending a
church service in Acteal in 1997. However the Acteal massacre was only one
in a long history of forced displacement, assassination and rape, in which
hundreds have died and hundreds more have been made landless.

While the world's attention is focused on Oaxaca, they face the imminent
threat of another, potentially more violent, eviction from their homes and
lands.


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