On June 14 at 4:30 a.m., around 3000 people from the ministerial police, preventive police and Oaxaca state firemen began to violently remove a sit-in of 70,000 workers from Section 22 of the National Union of Education Workers (SNTE) with tear gas, smoke grenade, stun grenades and firearms. Thus far there are 13 reported detentions, 4 injured persons, 5 bullet wounds and between 6 and 9 dead.
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Text from www.indymedia.org
Photos by Aotearoa Indymedia Foreign Correspondents
On June 14 at 4:30 a.m., around 3000 people from the ministerial police, preventive police and Oaxaca state firemen began to violently remove a sit-in of 70,000 workers from Section 22 of the National Union of Education Workers (SNTE) with tear gas, smoke grenade, stun grenades and firearms. Thus far there are 13 reported detentions, 4 injured persons, 5 bullet wounds and between 6 and 9 dead. The Teachers Union office building was also broken into and the installations of Radio Plantón were destroyed (Radio Planton is a free/un-licensed community radio station that has been a point of reference for social movements in Oaxaca).
With 3 weeks until elections and with the events in San Salvador Atenco still present (with 28 persons charged and jailed), once again the use of force instead of dialogue is the privileged response to citizens exercising their constitutional rights.
indymedia oaxaca | centro de medios libres df | radio pacheco | Urgent Actino Against Violence in Oaxaca | Latest News: 1, 2 | More on Atenco | video | audio
Since May 15, the first day of the present period of action in the teachers’ struggle, an atmosphere of hostility and confrontation against the teachers union has been has been sown within Oaxacan society. This, far from fortifying the search for a peaceful and negotiated solution to the teachers’ demands, has encouraged the conditions of scaled-up violence against this sector.
May 22 was the first day of Section 22 of the SNTE teacher-working class actions (some of the teachers are adherents to The Other Campaign) to support the educational demands of the people of Oaxaca. 70,000 teachers begin an extended sit-in in the center of the city in front of the old Government Palace and in 56 surrounding streets, to ask for fulfillment of their list of demands (first presented on May 1) that includes improvements to educational infrastructure (construction of classrooms, laboratories and workshops; uniforms; free student breakfasts; and more funding for scholarships and staff hiring), legal recognition of Radio Plantón, salary increases and recognition of the legitimacy of the union.
On June 1, the State Congress closes off dialogue without explanation and demands that all teachers return to their classrooms by June 5 or face salary sanctions and cancellation of labor contracts. An express request is also made to national public security organs to intervene and proceed with the removal of the thousands of men and women teachers maintaining the sit-in in the center of the city (3500 federal preventive police (PFP), state Preventive Police, the Special Police Operations Unit (UPOE, an elite grouping) and Municipal Police are moved to Oaxaca City). These decisions are endorsed on June 2 by more than 300 municipal presidents that make up the State Coordinating Body in Favor of Education. Section 22 of the SNTE decides during its assembly no to accept the ultimátum and to continue with the sit-in and resistance actions: road blocks; closures of the airport, PEMEX installations, the Chamber of Deputies, and the State Prosecutor’s Office; takeover of a highway toll booth; removal of parking meters, connections to city drainage and security cameras in the center of the city; the burning of election propaganda; and massive mobilizations (120,000 people participated in actions on June 7). They also demanded the resignation of the governor for refusing to dialogue.
Today, June 14 at 4:30 a.m., some 3000 elements from the ministerial police, preventive police and Oaxaca state firemen began to violently remove a sit-in of 70,000 workers from Section 22 of the National Union of Education Workers (SNTE) with tear gas, smoke grenade, stun grenades and firearms. Thus far there are 13 reported detentions, 4 injured persons, 5 bullet wounds and between 6 and 9 dead. The Teachers Union office building was also broken into and the installations of Radio Plantón were destroyed (Radio Planton is a free/un-licensed community radio station that has been a point of reference for social movements in Oaxaca).
With 3 weeks until elections and with the events in San Salvador Atenco still present (with 28 persons charged and jailed), once again the use of force instead of dialogue is the privileged response to citizens exercising their constitutional rights.
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Re: The Oaxaca Uprising - Mexico
Re: The Oaxaca Uprising - Mexico
POLICE ATTACK TEACHERS IN OAXACA,
BUT FAIL TO BREAK STRIKE
[snip]
The Police Attack and Aerial Bombing
At 4:30 in the morning on June 14 police from several different state riot police corps marched into the central plaza of Oaxaca and attacked teachers, many of them with their children, sleeping in make-shift tents and shelters of the plantón in the historic city center of Oaxaca. While the police moved in swinging their clubs, other police threw tear gas canisters down on the crowd from a hotel window. A police helicopter also flew over the plaza dropping tear gas canisters on the teachers. Some police reportedly fired 38 caliber and 9 millimeter pistols at the demonstrators, though the governor claimed the police were unarmed.
Police then moved to attack the headquarters of SNTE Local 22. There they destroyed the broadcasting equipment of the union’s radio station, Radio Plantón, and arrested several teacher leaders and activists.
Teachers Re-take the Plaza
Within a couple of hours the teachers had regrouped, armed themselves with clubs and pipes and commandeered a number of buses and they moved to retake the plaza from the police. The teachers, chanting, “You’re going to fall, Ulises, you’re going to fall.” succeeded in defeating the police, retook the plaza, and took several police and government intelligence officers prisoner. By 10:00 a.m. the teachers, supported by university students and social activists, were once again in control of the center of the city.
The following day, June 15, the Oaxaca state government and Local 22 negotiated with the mediation of the federal government Secretary of the Interior (Gobernación). Ulises Ruiz now called for a “lessening of tensions” and the two sides negotiated an exchange of prisoners, the state government released 10 teachers and suspended (but did not drop) criminal charges against 25 teachers. In exchange, Local 22 released several police and intelligence officers. The state government agreed to pay for damages caused by the police, including the destruction of Radio Plantón and to find more funds for teachers in Oaxaca. The Oaxaca authorities also called upon the Federal government to “re-classify” the teachers, so that they would receive higher base salaries.
www.ueinternational.org/Mexico_info/mlna_articles.php
videos on www.indybay.org/newsitems/2006/06/20/18281602.php
Re: The Oaxaca Uprising - Mexico
¿Que pasa en Oaxaca?
22 June: Governor Ulises paid people (estimates vary, around 10,000) to attend his "peace march" - demanding the teachers return to their schools. The march was scheduled to confront the teachers in the occupied town centre, however, the paid marchers had a change of heart and were too afraid to show there faces in el centro. The teachers union announced that their primary demand now is the removal of Governor Ulises from office, as this is what the people of Oaxaca desire. (There was a general assembly of Oaxaqueños to decide this).
June 23: Members of other unions strike today: medical workers, bureaucrats, electricians, social services, and more. The teachers closed all the town banks for the whole day. A solidarity march from the Oaxaca city barrio of Santa Rosario is scheduled to take place. Around the city many people are carrying radios tuned into Radio Planton. We hear that 40 buses of riot police are headed for the centre of town and the teachers there. So the march is diverted and people get into vehicles and convoy to the town centre. The police are nowhere to be seen but all along the route are thousands of people cheering the convoy. In the zocalo speeches are made, another mega march is planned for next week. The voices of the people in the zocalo and along the convoy are all saying the same thing: "Ulises OUT!".
that's all for now...
see www.narconews.com and indymedia oaxaca for more
saludos :)
Re: The Oaxaca Uprising - Mexico
Re: The Oaxaca Uprising - Mexico
Re: The Oaxaca Uprising - Mexico
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