Oaxaca Facing Imminent Attack

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Parts of Oaxaca City (Mexico) have been occupied for over four months, in what started as a teachers strike and blossomed into a broad movement, Popular Assemblies of the Peoples of Oaxaca (APPO), following an attack by state forces on the teachers. APPO is demanding the removal of the corrupt and murderous PRI governor, Ulises Ruiz Ortiz, and the release of political prisoners. Apparently to appease PRI partners and corporate masters, Vincente Fox's federal forces are preparing for an attack.

4th October 2006 - An attack seems imminent, we heard the army is stationed near the Oaxaca coast (around 6 hours drive from Oaxaca). They have helicopters and planes ready to go.

APPEAL FOR NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL AID
The word I have now is that there are about 5,000 men wearing army uniforms who are not army, but police, culled from other states like Vercruz and Morelia, that is to say, this is a PRI operation, not the federal troops, altho I don't know how our source explains the "naval" helicopters (maybe not?). The "police" are heavily armed, and the attack is supposed to happen around 10:00 PM Oaxaca time. The attack, code name cicloncinco, was revealed by the same person who informed our friend that there would be a drive-by shooting last night, which came true.

Indymedia Oaxaca reported on miltary overflights on September 30 | APPO has called for demonstrations at Mexican Consulates.

Links: Indymedia Oaxaca | el enemigo común | Narco News | Radio APPO | Audio from Oaxaca | Photos | Timeline of Events | The Oaxaca Uprising - Mexico (AIMC)

Narco News Reports (english/español) 26/5 | 7/6 | 8/6 | 12/6 | 14a/6 | 14/6 | 15/6 | 15/6 | 17/6 | 21/6 | 21/6 | 22/6 | 23/6 | 24/6 | 27/6 | 29/6 | 7/6 | 7/7 | 15/7 | 22/7 | 23/7 | 28/7 | 2/8 | 4/8 | 9/8 | 11/8 | 14/8 | 20/8 | 21/8 | 22/8 | 23/8 | 26/8 | 30/8 | 3/9 | 5/9 | 7/9 | 7/9 | 17/9 | 18/9 | 21/9 | 24/9 | 26/9 | 28/9 | 29/9 | 1/10 | 1/10 | 1/10 | 2/10 | 3/10 | 3/10 | 4/10

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Related

http://mexico.indymedia.org/oaxaca

http://narconews.com/

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Re: Oaxaca Facing Imminent Attack

Embassy of Mexico
Head of Mission: Her Excellency Mrs María Angélica Arce de Jeannet, Ambassador
Level 8, Perpetual Trust House, 111-115 Customhouse Quay, Wellington
Postal Address PO Box 11-510, Manners Street, Wellington
Telephone +64 4 472 0555 Facsimile +64 4 496 3559 Email mexico@xtra.co.nz
Website portal.Mexican Government Portal [external link]
Office Hours Mon - Thurs 0900 -1600hrs; Fri 0900 - 1500hrs; Consular Mon - Fri 0900 - 1400

Consulate of Mexico, Christchurch
Christchurch
Telephone +64 3 343 6744 Mobile 027 432 2353

Consulate of Mexico, Auckland
88 Shortland St, Private Bag 92 518, Wellesley St, Auckland
Telephone +64 9 977 5041 Facsimile +64 9 977 5078 Email denis.mcnamara@simpsongrierson.com

Re: Oaxaca Facing Imminent Attack

yeh, but what can you say to them?
they support the very people who everyone's against.
"Hi, I'd just like to say a big fuck you and hope your PRI helicopters get molotov'd and ......zapatista......"
see what I mean?
I heard the commandantes of the ezln are meeting in Mexico city to talk about it

Re: Re: Oaxaca Facing Imminent Attack

In reply to the question what can you say to ambassadors i think the person asking the question answers it themself very well. There is no point in lobying them, pleading, or beging they need to be told in no uncertain terms fuck you stop your violence. They will not listen but they should be made to feel our disgust at their actions.

Oaxaca Udate and callout

URGENT APPEAL BY THE POPULAR ASSEMBLY OF THE PEOPLES OF OAXACA (APPO)
FOR INTERNATIONAL SOLIDARITY IN THE FACE OF A CONCENTRATION OF
MILITARY TROOPS
(original message in Spanish below)

The APPO denounces the concentration of about 20,000 sailors and
soldiers in the naval ports of Oaxaca

Margarita Salazar
3 de octubre de 2006

Los Angeles, California.- Leaders of the Popular Assembly of the
Peoples of Oaxaca (APPO) are appealing urgently at this moment that
all national and international social organizations carry out diverse
emergency actions to stop the Mexican government from repressing
thousands of persons who participate in the popular movement in
Oaxaca.

Professor Ezequiel Rosales, Organization Secretary of the National
Union of Education Workers (SNTE), and a member of the APPO, called
for national and international support to denounce the concentration
of about 20,000 members of the Mexican armed forces who are ready to
move into the capital of Oaxaca to attack those who are maintaining
the strike encampment in the zócalo (city center) in case no
negotiated agreement is reached with the Secretariate of Governmental
Affairs in the next hours.

The call was made by telephone to some 200 persons who that night
were carrying out a vigil in front of the Consulate of Mexico in Los
Angeles and who had conducted a protest strike encampment at the
Consulate since 8:00 that morning.

The professor said that Mexican sailors and soldiers are now located
in three strategic points of the state, which are the naval bases of
Salina Cruz, Puerto Escondido and the Bays of Huatulco and that they
are ready to move into the capital of Oaxaca at any moment.

"Oaxaca is living a virtual state of war", the teacher commented,
then added that a military display of this kind has not been seen in
Mexico since 1994, when the Zapatistas (in Chiapas) took up arms.

"We will resist, we will defend the zócalo", the leader said, and
added that the APPO has reinforced its barricades throughout the
city, especially those that are located in the historic center and
which are, he said, "truly walls" of self-defense.

"We have no weapon except the weapon of reason", he clarified when a
local television reporter repeatedly asked if the occupiers of the
zócalo would respond to presence of armed forces.

"We believe that we would do so in legitimate defense", concluded
Rosales among the shouts of demonstrators who moments before had
prayed that "the hearts and minds of the government officials would
be touched so that they would not repress the people."

Rufino Domíngues, general coordinator of the Indigenous Front of
Binational Organizations (in LA) declared himself - as did dozens of
persons during the entire day - against the use of force by the
government and added that any initiation of violence would be the
responsability of the State headed by Ulises Ruiz Ortiz and the
Mexican president, Vicente Fox.

(translation)
Lois M. Meyer, Ph.D.
Associate Professor, and
Bilingual/ESL Program Coordinator
Language, Literacy & Sociocultural Studies
College of Education
Hokona 267
University of New Mexico
Albuquerque, NM 87131
Tel: 505/277-7244

ORIGINAL SPANISH

Llamado urgente de la APPO a la solidaridad internacional ante la
concentración de tropas del ejército

Denuncia la concentración de alrededor de 20 mil efectivos en las
bases navales en puertos Oaxaqueños

Margarita Salazar
3 de octubre de 2006

Los Angeles, California.- Dirigentes de la Asamblea de los Pueblos de
Oaxaca (APPO), están haciendo en estos momentos un llamado urgente a
todas las organizaciones sociales a nivel nacional e internacional
para que realicen diversas acciones de emergencia para impedir que el
gobierno mexicano reprima a miles de personas que participan en el
movimiento popular en Oaxaca.

El profesor Ezequiel Rosales, Secretario de Organización del
Sindicato Nacional de Trabajadores de la Educación (SNTE), e
integrante de la APPO, llamó esta noche a la opinión pública nacional
e internacional a denunciar la concentración de alrededor de 20 mil
efectivos de las fuerzas armadas mexicanas que se encuentran listos
para desplazarse a la capital de Oaxac para atacar a quienes se
encuentran en plantón en el zócalo de la ciudad en caso de que no se
llegue a un acuerdo en las próximas horas con la Secretaría de
Gobernación.

El llamado fue hecho vía telefónica ante unas 200 personas que esta
noche se encuentran realizando una vigilia frente al Consulado
General de México en Los Angeles y quienes llevaron a cabo un plantón
de protesta en ese lugar desde las 8:00 de la mañana.

El profesor dijo que efectivos de la Marina y del Ejército Mexicano
se encuentran ya en los tres puntos estratégicos del estado que son
las bases navales de Salina Cruz, Puerto Escondido y Bahías de
Huatulco y que están listos para dirigirse a la ciudad de Oaxaca en
cualquier momento.
"Se está viviendo un virtual estado de guerra en Oaxaca", comentó el
maestro quien agregó que un despliegue militar de este tipo no se
veía en México desde 1994, cuando los zapatistas se levantaron en
armas.

"Vamos a resistir, vamos a defender el zócalo", dijo el dirigente
quien agregó que la APPO ha reforzado las barricadas de toda la
ciudad, sobretodo las que se encuentran en el centro histórico y que
son, dijo, "verdaderas murallas" de autodefensa.

"No tenemos más armas que las armas de la razón", aclaró ante la
pregunta de un reportero de la televisión local quien insistió en
preguntar si los ocupantes del zócalo responderían a la presencia de
las fuerzas armadas.

"Creemos que lo haríamos en legítima defensa", concluyó Rosales entre
gritos de apoyo de los manifestantes que minutos antes habían
realizado una oración para "tocar el corazón y la mente de la gente
del gobierno para que no reprima al pueblo".

Rufino Domínguez, coordinador general del Frente Indígena de
Organizaciones Binacionales se pronunció –como lo hicieron decenas de
personas durante todo el día- en contra del uso de la fuerza por
parte del gobierno y añadio que cualquier inicio de violencia sería
responsabilidad del gobierno del estado encabezado por Ulises Ruiz
Ortiz y el presidente mexicano, Vicente Fox.

Red Alert plus history of APPO

MEXICO:

Oaxaca Protesters on Red Alert

Diego Cevallos

OAXACA, Mexico, Oct 4 (IPS) - In the heart of this southern Mexican city, protesters grouped in more than 350 different social organisations, who have been camping out in the parks and on the streets for over four months, are governing through people's assemblies and running radio stations that they have taken over, while their own security guards keep watch.

The movement, which began with a routine teachers' strike for higher wages, has expelled all public officials from their local government posts, demanding in-depth changes and the resignation of the governor of the state of Oaxaca, one of the poorest in the country along with the neighbouring Chiapas and Guerrero.

But the activists are now facing the threat of the use of force by the government of President Vicente Fox.

"The revolution is the movement of the organised people, and what we have here is a revolutionary movement," Ramiro Esperanza, a 25-year-old teacher who belongs to the Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca (APPO), told IPS.

"But we are looking for solutions within theàinstitutions, and without the use of arms. We do not want bloodshed," he added.

Esperanza, who has been camping out since May 22 in one of the dozens of camps set up by the movement in the capital, says APPO is here to stay, and that it will spread to other states.

As he talks to IPS, children play nearby, and the loudspeaker of a truck can be heard in the distance blaring over and over again "the people united will never be defeated."

Thousands of police have gathered on the outskirts of the city, and on the Pacific coasts of the state, hundreds of soldiers and Navy sailors are preparing for deployment. "We expect the blows to come soon, but we're going to stick it out here," says Esperanza.

The APPO encampments, where hundreds of bottles have been stocked to make Molotov cocktails and many protesters have armed themselves with sticks and slingshots, are guarded by local residents from behind barriers made of sandbags, rocks, scrap metal and burnt-out buses.

During the daytime, thousands of people circulate among the camps without any problem, and calm reigns. But at night, the access roads are blocked and the "topiles" (the local vigilantes) patrol the streets armed with firecrackers and carrying radios and cell-phones to communicate among themselves.

In the camps, where sleeping and cooking spaces are covered with sheets of plastic, there is a unanimous rejection of the use of violence, and demonstrators complain that at night irregular armed groups, who they identify as off-duty police officers, shoot at them.

In addition, say the activists, several of their leaders were illegally detained.

The possibility that federal troops will be called in to break up the movement has become more real in the last few hours, after APPO refused to attend talks in Mexico City Wednesday called by President Fox, to which representatives of other sectors from Oaxaca, like business, political leaders, "parents" and the Catholic Church were also invited.

The government promised that the institutional reforms needed in Oaxaca would be discussed in the talks, including the possibility of a law authorising the organisation of referendums that would allow voters to recall the state governor.

If the possibilities of dialogue are exhausted, force will be used as a last resort, said Fox, who has pledged to resolve the conflict before he leaves office on Dec. 1 and hands over to his successor Felipe Calderón, also from the conservative governing National Action Party (PAN).

"The negotiating forum that they invited us to is a sham, because they called together individuals who do not represent the people of Oaxaca. They just want to justify" calling in the army, said Esperanza.

There have been three failed attempts at talks between APPO and the government in the past few months.

APPO's main demand is the resignation of Governor Ulises Ruiz of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), which ruled the country from 1929 to 2000 and continues to govern the state of Oaxaca

Ruiz was elected in 2004 in elections that the opposition says were fixed. He is accused of corruption and human rights abuses, and of governing in a despotic manner, brutally cracking down on protests, and encouraging the police to form paramilitary groups to squelch dissent and opposition.

"Fuera Ulises Ruiz asesino" (Out with Ulises Ruiz the Murderer) is written on many walls in the city of Oaxaca.

The central government does not have the power to remove governors from office. The national Senate holds the key here, as it can institute impeachment proceedings. But legislators of the PAN and the PRI have decided to block that option.

The four radio stations taken over by APPO repeatedly broadcast messages on Wednesday saying that police and federal soldiers would be entering the city at any moment.

"Compañeros, we don't want anybody to die, but we're ready to accept casualties if that's the way the government wants it," said one of the movement's spokespersons on La Ley radio, which has been under the control of APPO since June. (APPO gave up control of one of the radio stations on Wednesday.)

However, Esperanza said that "if the soldiers come in with guns blazing, we won't have any choice but to retreat, and come back later." To expose "our children is senseless, and I don't want to die here," he said.

"Now, if they want to arrest the leaders, they'd better build a wall around the whole of Oaxaca and put us all in jail, because we're not going to give up the fight," said the young primary school teacher, a member of the Revolutionary Popular Front, a group inspired by Marxism-Leninism.

The conflict began on May 22, when the teachers' union in Oaxaca, Section 22 of the National Union of Education Workers, declared a strike demanding higher wages.

When teachers camping in the city centre were violently removed on Jun. 14, other groups joined their voice to the union's demands, and the movement gelled with the formation of APPO.

"The teachers' strike grew from a trade union movement into a broad, diverse movement reflecting most of the social grievances" of the people of Oaxaca, according to a report by the non-governmental Oaxacan Human Rights Network.

The Network confirms APPO's denunciations of paramilitary activity and arbitrary arrests. But it also says members of the Assembly have committed acts of violence against people who do not support them, and have been on the brink of lynching several people.

In recent weeks, supposed guerrilla groups have made their appearance in parts of Oaxaca to salute the social struggle. And on Monday, one of them allegedly detonated small pipe bombs in the doorways of two banks in the city.

APPO says it had nothing to do with the explosions, which it said were most likely part of a government strategy to justify calling in the troops.

Business owners and shopkeepers in Oaxaca, who are suffering losses as a result of the conflict, accuse the social movement of being violent. So do some politicians, spokespeople for Fox and Catholic Church leaders.

"My group (the Revolutionary Popular Front) defends Marxism-Leninism, but we don't think this is the right time for an armed struggle. We don't want guerrilla groups with two or three guns madly opening fire in the mountains; that's not the way now," Esperanza said.

The APPO umbrella has brought together leftist organisations of different tendencies, including some that have clashed over vision and strategy in the past.

Oaxaca is one of the poorest states in this country of over 104 million people. In Oaxaca, 80.3 percent of the population lack sanitation services, street lighting, piped water and paved streets, the Oaxacan Human Rights Network reported.

According to the Network, founded in 1996 by a number of human rights groups, eight out of 10 Oaxacans live in extreme poverty.

Within the state population of 3.5 million, the richest 10 percent of households receives 13 times the income of the poorest 10 percent, said the organisation.

"In the present circumstances. Oaxacan society faces a choice between giving up its aspirations and making do with the current system, or trying to reform the state in order to design, organise and evaluate a form of government that will fully guarantee the exercise of human rights," said the Network. (FIN/2006)

Re: Oaxaca Facing Imminent Attack

Lots of videos at youtube
eg english account of teachers reoccupation in June
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kUIfVpA4GwU

Re: Oaxaca Facing Imminent Attack

Short article on http://rankandfilers.blogspot.com
Dave Brown

Re: Oaxaca Facing Imminent Attack

the PPTA should be supporting this, it would be good to have coordinated solidarity pickets across aotearoa in support of this.
up with the barricades!

Police and Government Thugs Open Fire on APPO Members

Four Wounded Outside the Department of Citizen Protection in Oaxaca City

By Enrique Mendez and Octavio Velez
La Jornada

October 13, 2006

OAXACA, October 11: The social and political crisis in Oaxaca was renewed just at the moment that a solution was being sought. Late in the afternoon, police and hired civilian thugs (“porros”) fired on Popular Assembly of the Peoples of Oaxaca (APPO) members and university students; the result was four injured, two of them in the leg, and others grazed on the forehead and back. That night Section 22 decided to suspend talks of returning to classes until the Senate makes a decision on the removal of the governor and other authorities.

Full story
http://www.narconews.com/Issue43/article2146.html