Archive for the 'APPO' Category

APPO Students Take Radio Universidad

The students of the Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca (APPO) took over Radio Universdad on April 30 to broadcast messages in support of APPO and the May Day march. APPO students also took Radio Universdad last June 14 in support of APPO and the teachers. They controlled the station until November when they eventually were forced to hand it over to the federal police. A student deejay spoke in support of Section 22 of the teacher’s union, the removal of Governor Ulises Ruiz, and the release of the remaining 40 political prisoners. They also asked the listeners to blockade the intersections in the morning. He claimed that a group of porros (a youth gang linked to government officials) was planning to oust them from the station.

Florentino López Martínez spoke at an event for “Día del Niño” in support of the APPO students. However, the director of the University, Francisco Martínez Neri, disapproves of the take over and plans on trying to convince the students to leave. He stated that although it was a passive take-over, this situation does not help the relationship between UABJO and APPO. He claims that UABJO will not use violence to remove the students but he hopes they will leave.

Marcha en Oaxaca

may dayYesterday, 80,000 protestors marched to the Zócalo in Oaxaca’s historic center in honor of International Worker’s Day. Involved in the march were members of Section 22 of the National Education Worker’s Union, APPO, and other union members. Once in the zócalo, the secretary of Section 22 stated that the marchers demand the removal of Governor Ulises Ruiz and the release of all political prisoners. At least 40 prisoners remain, predominately those who were arrested on November 25 after a day of protest in Oaxaca. On April 28, an APPO speaker, Florentino López Martí­nez, stated that the APPO fight continues. He is upset that the Secretary of the Government refuses to meet with APPO.

“Ulises entiende el magisterio no se vende!”, “hombro con hombro, codo con codo, la APPO, la APPO, la APPO somos todos!”, shouted the Oaxacan May Day protestors. [Translation: Ulises understand the teachers are not for sale!, "Shoulder with shoulder, side by side, the APPO, the APPO, the APPO we are everyone!] People often ask me about the current state of APPO. Well, I think an 80,000 person march answers that question, at least in part.

Urgent Human Rights Campaign

As of April 17, the World Organization against Torture (OMCT) places the arbitrary and violent April 13 arrest of APPO councilman David Venegas Reyes at the top of their Urgent Campaign list. This is very upsetting for Oaxacan activists and citizens because this highlights the continuing oppression by police and state agents. After November 25, Federal and State Police detained 350 people who the police claimed to be associated with the Popular Assembly for the People in Oaxaca. (APPO). When I was in Oaxaca, I attended an event where victims of the police spoke of the abuses they suffered while in prison. It was one of the most heartbreaking events I have witnessed.

The OMCT is requesting the global community to write letters requesting the guaranteed security and safety of Reyes. The official request is below:

Favor escribir a las autoridades de México para urgirlas a:
1. tomar de manera muy urgente las medidas necesarias para localizar el paradero del Sr. David Venegas Reyes;
2. tomar de manera muy urgente las medidas necesarias para garantizar la seguridad y la integridad física y psicológica del Sr. David Venegas Reyes, incluyendo una atención médica urgente, adecuada y gratuita que él requiera, así como para garantizar la seguridad e integridad del Sr. Isaac Torres Carmona y demás testigos de los hechos arriba denunciados;
3. ordenar la libertad inmediata del Sr. David Venegas Reyes en caso de encontrarse detenido en ausencia de cargos legales válidos o, en el caso de que estos cargos existan, llevarlo ante un tribunal competente, independiente, justo e imparcial y garantizarle sus derechos procesales en todo momento;
4. llevar a cabo una investigación independiente, exhaustiva e imparcial en torno a las circunstancias de todos los hechos arriba denunciados, con el fin de identificar a los responsables, llevarlos ante un tribunal competente, independiente, justo e imparcial y aplicarles las sanciones penales y/o administrativas previstas por la ley;
5. garantizar el respeto de los derechos humanos y las libertades fundamentales en todo el país, de conformidad con las normas internacionales de derechos humanos, en particular con la Convención Contra la Tortura.

OMCT demands the immediate release of Reyes, an independent investigation into the illegal arrest, and the guaranteed respect of human rights and fundamental freedom en Mexico. They also ask that the authorities to conform to the international norms of human rights, in particular with the Convention Against Torture. The OMCT provides the following addresses to send letters:

Misión Permanente de México ante las Naciones Unidas en Ginebra, 16, Avenue du Budé. 1202, Ginebra, Case postale 433. Fax: +41-22-748-0708. E-mail: mission.mexico@ties.itu.int

Sr. Presidente Felipe Calderón Hinojosa, Residencia Oficial de “Los Pinos”, Co. San Miguel Chapultepec, México D.F., C.P. 11850 México, Fax: +52-555-522-9413, E-mail: radio@appresidencia.gob.mx; webadmon@appresidencia.gob.mx

Sr. Eduardo Medina-Mora Icaza, Procuraduría General de la República, Reforma Norte esquina Violeta 75. Colonia Guerrero, CP. 06300, México D.F., TEL: +52-555-346-2003, E-mail: ofproc@pgr.gob.mx, Fax: +52-555-346-0906

Dr. José Luis Soberanes Fernández, Presidente de la CNDH, Email:correo@cndh.org.mx Tel: 52-555-631-0040, +52-555-681-8125, Fax: +52-555-681-8490, Toll Free: 01-800- 0086; Email: correo@fmdh.cndh.org.mx

Sr. Francisco Javier Ramírez Acuña, Secretario de Gobernación, Bucareli 99, 1er. piso, Col. Juárez, Delegación Cuauhtemoc, México D.F., C.P.06600, México, Fax: +52-555-093-3414 / + 52-555-093-3415 E-mail: santiagocreel@compuserve.com; ghuerta@segob.gob.mx

Maestro Ricardo Sepúlveda Iguiniz, Director de la Oficina para la Promoción y la Defensa de los Derechos Humanos, Reforma 99, PISO 21, PH, Colonia Tabacalera, C.P. 06030, México Fax: + 52-555-128-0234 TEL: +52-555-128-0223 and 24, Email:rsepulveda@segob.gob.mx

Comisión Mexicana de Defensa y Promoción de los Derechos Humanos A.C. (CMDPDH), Tehuantepec 155, Col. Roma Sur, México DF, CP 5584 2731, México, E-mail: cmdpdh@laneta.apc.org

Governor of Oaxaca: Gobernador de Oaxaca, Lic. José Murat Casab, Palacio de Gobierno, Bustamante s/n, 68000 Oaxaca, Oaxaca México, Fax: + 52-951-516-3737

APPO criticizes CNDH report

From a Mexico Solidarity News bulletin:

CNDH REPORT ON OAXACA CRITICIZED
The National Human Rights Commission (CNDH), a federal government agency, released a report Thursday on human rights abuses in Oaxaca that was attacked as a farce by the Popular Assembly of the Peoples of Oaxaca (APPO). The report justifies acts by police and state authorities that violated thefundamental guarantees of Oaxacan citizens, according to the APPO. While the report recognizes a number of grave human rights violations, it ignores the dozens of people who were disappeared during the popular uprising in Oaxaca late last year, as well as over 60 people who remain in prison. The report failed to fix responsibility for at least 20 assassinations and acts of torture, disappearance and arbitrary arrest by authorities. The 181-page report calls for investigation of armed paramilitary groups, but stops short of defining links between paramilitaries and Governor Ulises Ruiz. The report censured ex-President Vicente Fox but left Felipe Calderon blameless, even though the sitting administration has responsibility for investigating human rights abuses. The report also defended Governor Ruiz, claiming his removal would not resolve the tense situation that remains in the state.

Oaxacan Human Rights Delegation

I just received this notification:

HUMAN RIGHTS/HUMANITARIAN DELEGATION TO OAXACA

VICTIMS OF ONGOING AND WIDESPREAD GOVERNMENT REPRESSION IN OAXACA, MEXICO ASK FOR CONTINUED INTERNATIONAL ATTENTION

WHEN: April 22-April 28

WHERE: Oaxaca, Mexico

CONTACT: Oaxaca Solidarity Network, info@oaxacasolidarity.org

U.S. phone: 303-800-4453.

COST: $80 per day, which includes lodging, transportation during the delegation, all meals, guiding and translation.

WHAT: The Red Oaxaqueña de Derechos Humanos (Oaxacan Human Rights Network) http://www.rodh.org.mx/spip/ has extended a formal invitation to the Oaxaca Solidarity Network www.oaxacasolidarity.org and Rights Action www.rightsaction.org to continue with its work in increasing the international presence and awareness by organizing human rights delegations to Oaxaca to observe the current, ongoing government repression in the city, and to develop international solidarity efforts.

This delegation is a follow up to the December 16-22, 2006 and the February 10-16, 2007 emergency human rights delegations organized by the Oaxacan Solidarity Network and sponsored by Rights Action. Delegates—including human rights lawyers, journalists, authors, investigators, graduate students and activists—met with Oaxacan human rights organizations, victims of repression, leaders of grassroots non-governmental organizations and government officials. The reports, articles, documentaries, testimonies, photographs, and other materials produced by members of our delegation will soon be available at www.oaxacasolidarity.org (at present they are available at http://web.mac.com/oaxacasolidarity).

WHY: October 30 this year marked the arrival of some 4000 Federal Preventative Police (PFP), whose goal was to break up a non-violent popular movement calling for true participatory democracy and an end to widespread government corruption and grinding poverty. Since the PFP arrived in Oaxaca, there have at least 20 murders, more than 350 arbitrary detentions, hundreds of wounded and searches without warrants of homes of many popular leaders. There are many documented reports of torture and disappearances. (For background information and delegation goals, see below)

In spite of the government’s recent campaign to promote tourism in Oaxaca, repression against members of the popular movement continues…

-There are 51 political prisoners still being held in various jails throughout Oaxaca.
-Many leaders of the popular movement are openly threatened with pending arrests warrants to discourage continued dissent.
-Arbitrary arrests continue, including the arrest, interrogation and strip-search last week of a well-respected German artist and Columbia University professor for a benefit event for Oaxacan political prisoners.
-More than 100 schools have been taken over by supporters of the Gov. Ulises Ruiz Ortega (URO), and there have been violent confrontations at several. The state teachers union is again threatening a general strike if the situation remains unresolved.
-Streets are constantly patrolled by members of various police/military units—often in camouflage with bullet-proof vests, carrying sub-machine guns.

Due to the ongoing repression and violence in Oaxaca, continued international presence is critical, as is the urgent need to learn and spread the word about the grave, ongoing violations of human rights in Oaxaca. This human rights/humanitarian delegation will continue the work of demonstrating solidarity, and of international education and activism.

ITINERARY: During the 6 days in Oaxaca, delegates will have a series of meetings with families of the murdered, detained and disappeared, leaders of the popular movement, human rights activists, journalists, local grassroots indigenous rights organizations, victims of repression, and possibly government officials, representatives of the business community, and representatives of police forces. The itinerary also includes a day-long trip to a community outside of Oaxaca that has experienced repression due to their involvement in the non-violent popular movement for social justice, human rights and true democracy.

WHO: Our trip is being sponsored by Rights Action and the Oaxaca Solidarity Network, in collaboration with various human rights organizations. The Oaxaca Solidarity Network is a collective of concerned U.S. and Mexican citizens working to raise international awareness of the non-violent popular social movement here, and create international pressure to end the widespread human rights violations throughout the city and state of Oaxaca.

We invite ANY interested persons or organization to join our delegation. The Oaxacan Solidarity Network and the Red Oaxaqueña de Derechos Humanos have specifically asked for solidarity and for human rights observers, so we are particularly interested in the participation of activists, journalists, lawyers, professors, students and others who, upon return to the U.S. or Canada, can work effectively to put the current abuses into the internationa spotlight.

CONTACT: Oaxaca Solidarity Network, info@oaxacasolidarity.org U.S.
phone: 303-800-4453. FOR MORE INFORMATION AND BACKGROUND, VISIT THE WEBSITE THAT LISTS REPORTS, ARTICLES, TESTIMONIES, AND OTHER MATERIALS FROM THE FIRST OSN/RIGHTS ACTION DELEGATION:

http://web.mac.com/oaxacasolidarity

Goals of this delegation: This human rights/humanitarian delegation to Oaxaca is being offered to promote international awareness and solidarity. Participants will meet with:

-families of the murdered, detained and disappeared
-victims of repression
-leaders of the popular movement
-human rights activists
-journalists
-local grassroots indigenous rights organizations
-possibly representatives of the business community and local police forces/government
-others that have been closely tied with the movement (teachers, artists, etc)

Participants in the delegation will gain a detailed, balanced and informed glimpse into Oaxacan civil society today, and the dangerous crisis it is facing.

The goals of the delegation are twofold: to provide an in-depth understanding of the Oaxacan popular movement and the government’s response, and to spread that awareness widely upon the delegates’ return to the U.S. It is our hope that such knowledge and awareness can aid in the growing movement of international solidarity with the people of Oaxaca. The pressure of international solidarity can help curb the violence, arbitrary detentions and murders of Oaxacans involved in the movement for true democracy and a politics based on hope, respect and justice.

10th MegaMarcha

megamarchaThe 10th APPO Megamarcha was reminiscent of those last year. Many of the same banners were scattered throughout the crowd of several thousand and anarchist youth spray painted “APPO,” “Fuera Ulises,” (Out with Governor Ulises) and “Libertad los Presos Politicos” (Free the Political Prisoners). The march started at 10am at the Benito Juarez monument on the outskirts of town and ended at Plaza de la Danza, the courtyard of a large church. Some in the crowd chanted “zocalo! zocalo!” as the march neared the historic center, but the majority continued to Plaza de la Danza. The zocalo (a site of much opposition for the last six months of 2006) was completely barricaded by Oaxacan Preventive Police behind large fences and barbed wire. I asked one of the members of COMO (Coordinadora de Mujeres Oaxaquenos, Primero de Agosto, APPO) what she thought of the march. She said that it was beautiful and quite a success, although the turn-out was less than expected, and that there were no incidences of violence. I know the person who takes care of maintenance at my apartment building would want to add that the graffiti is definitely a negative aspect. I’ve lost track of the number of times he has repainted the front face of the building. As we both stood on the roof of my building, I took pictures of the march and he frowned as the building was covered in graffiti.

Women spoke passionately at the rally about the need for women’s rights, the end to domestic and sexual abuse, the need for more female political representation, the protection of natural resources, and the need to free all political prisoners. Overall, the march was a sign that APPO continues, but it also visibly shows how it is injured. The APPO and the teachers of Section 22 continue their struggle, but many have gone underground or moved out of fear of imprisonment or a worse fate.

The newspaper Imparcial (which is known for being on the side of the government) stated that the march was a resurge in violence and vandalism. At the end of the article it stated that action is being taken against Radio Platnon which started their “clandestine” transmissions during the march.

Waiting for the Protestors…

My apartment is a block from the destination point of today´s 10th MegaMarcha in Oaxaca. I am waiting for the march to arrive. A few blocks from Plaza de la Danza, the destination point, is the zócalo. Each entrance to the zocalo is blocked by police, barricades, and barbed wire. I took pictures (to be uploaded later) of the police checking bags as people squeezed through the fence. Some businesses around the zócalo are closed for the day, assumedly in anticipation for the march. This megamarcha lands on International Women´s Day and therefore hopes to bring awareness to indigenous women´s issues in Oaxaca. The women are also making the freedom of the 64 remaining political prisoners a central issue.

I´m listening to updates about the march on Radio Platon. Today, Radio Platon is officially back on the air at 92.1 after being removed from the airways by the government in August. Radio Platon´s station is located at the Education Worker´s Union office.

Women of APPO Demand Justice

This afternoon I attended a forum on human rights abuses as part of a week long series of events sponsored by the Women of the First of August APPO group. Over sixty political prisoners remain in prison, primarily apprehended in November after the Federal Preventive Police (PFP) took over the capital. I have read many stories of the human rights abuses suffered by the prisoners and by others at the hands of the PFP, and I have reported some of those stories on this site. However, it is different to hear the testimonies of such abuses from the people and family members of those who suffered it–and continue to suffer. One after another, women and men told personal stories, many overcome by tears, of being beaten and detained by the PFP. They were also yelled at, humiliated, and terrified without given the basic rights of a lawyer or a phone call. For days, their family members did not know where they were. Others, like Alva Gomez discussed the major disruption of her family after three of her siblings were detained on November 25. Delfina Martinez Silva’s son was beaten and put in a coma for two months. Adrian Bautista Espinoza offered us a look into what it is like to have survived this ordeal. After his experiences of being beaten, detained, and flown to a prison in Tepit, he is bothered by the silence surrounding this issue. He sadly joked that the most common question people ask him is, “What was it like to ride in a helicopter?”

Families of the prisoners, ex-prisoners, and families of those missing demand that the silence be broken and that the government be held responsible for these crimes. A professor of economics at UNAM, who first spoke at the forum, claims that the victims have been criminalized whereas the government is the one going against the constitution.

Tomorrow, Tuesday, the Women of the First of August will sponsor a forum on the role of women in the movement at 4pm at la Facultad de Derechos, UABJO (in the zocalo).

The Struggle over Schools–Literally

When does the desire to teach lead to blows between teachers? In Oaxaca, several schools have become battlefields between a fractured Union: Section 22 and 59 of the National Education Workers Union. Section 59 was formed during the strike of Oaxacan teachers last year. Spearheaded by Governor Ulises and national SNTE president and PRI member Elba Esther Gordillo, “dissident” teachers and families controlled various schools throughout the state by physically keeping Section 22 teachers from returning to work once the strike was over. Section 22 is demanding the return of over 100 schools in Oaxaca. Eight days ago, teachers clashed at a technological high school in Juchitan de Zaragoza. Today, the clash led to about seven injuries at a high school in Pochutla. Section 22 teachers and members blame, of course, the PRI and families who are part of the PRI for starting the conflict. My question is: who does this serve? It definitely cannot be good for the students to witness their teachers physically fighting or to have a continuous change of educators move through their classroom…if they are even able to go to class. Or perhaps our focus should be on the Mexican and Oaxacan school system in general. The teachers are underpaid (but paid more than most Oaxacan citizens) and the system overall is corrupt. Teachers can pass down their credentials to family members and often do not have the education required for their credentials.

Teachers, APPO, and Politics, Oh My!

Below is an article by Nancy Davies of Narco News. I’ve been looking for an article that explains the recent events in Oaxaca, the actions by the teachers, and the current state of APPO. I have to admit that things have been a bit confusing lately. This is Nancy’s outline of everything:

The APPO Comes Back Strong in Oaxaca

The Teachers, Indigenous Peoples and Civil Society Regroup

By Nancy Davies
Commentary from Oaxaca

February 23, 2007

Section 22 of the National Education Workers Union (SNTE, by its Spanish initials) decided that the truce asked for by the state governor was without value and took over the government office of the Secretary General (Segob, as it is referred to) in the city of Oaxaca on February 21, along with thirty-two other offices statewide. The popular assembly movement has regrouped and caught its breath. It’s now in a new phase of the struggle for Oaxaca, which I call the 2007 pre-electoral phase.

How the Popular Assembly of the Peoples of Oaxaca (APPO, in its Spanish initials) has been able to recapture its former strength has three answers; the teachers, the indigenous peoples and civil society.

The internal union housecleaning involved displacing the former secretary of Section 22 of SNTE, Enrique Rueda Pacheco, who is regarded as a sell-out. Rueda’s formal status appears to be irrelevant at this moment; he no longer has major input into union decisions. Section 22’s strength has rebounded despite the fracture caused by the collaboration of Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI, in its Spanish initials) governor Ulises Ruiz Ortiz (URO) and national SNTE president, PRI member Elba Esther Gordillo. Between the two of them, they split off Section 59 of SNTE, a group of between 2,000-4,000 teachers out of the 70,000 Section 22 membership. Along with Section 59, the Central Council for Struggle (CCL) set up by Ruiz has been holding 200 schools, locking out the Section 22 teachers who were on strike for more than five months. The substitute teachers, along with parents in sympathy with the governor, refused to permit Section 22 teachers to return to their classrooms.

The post November 25 struggle has been violent, with state police coming into classes to arrest teachers who are APPO supporters and with the two union factions coming to blows outside schools in some areas such as Juchitán. Near Oaxaca, in the suburb of Viguera, according to one teacher who lives there but who teaches in another town, round-the-clock guards (called topiles in the usos y costumbres vernacular) patrol to forestall invasion, capture or shooting of Viguera residents.

Segob (the federal secretary of government’s department) negotiated a pause in the struggle but did not honor its promise to hand back the schools to Section 22. In retaliation for this failure, about 7,000 members of Section 22 – not classroom teachers – aided by members and sympathizers of the APPO carried out a takeover of the thirty-two state offices following the decision of the APPO state council.

This reconnection of the APPO and the education workers union brings back much of the lost strength of the APPO, which called for protests (the ninth megamarch on February 4) that demonstrated that the APPO is recovering from the fear induced during the weeks following the brutal and indiscriminate November 25 attack by the Federal Preventive Police (PFP, in its Spanish initials) and the subsequent hunt-down of APPO supporters.

In addition to the APPO and the teachers, there is now the resolution of the indigenous population in play. This segment of the population – indeed, the largest segment in Oaxaca – has stepped forward for the popular movement. The debate among the indigenous towns with respect to self-organizing for best protection from centuries of oppression has now surfaced. It reflects two different options. One, as espoused in the Juchitán area headed by the Democratic Revolutionary Party (PRD, in its Spanish initials) senator Othón Cuevas, seeks to form a strong regional alliance. The other proposition, long espoused by the generation of men like Jaime Martinz Luna of Guelatao, was for maintaining each community independently, in virtual isolation, and letting the external PRI do what it chose in exchange for internal safety. The force of caciquismo was so intense, and the people so poor, that they were highly dependent on the hand-outs the caciques brought, of cement or food staples. Martinez had good reasons; there’s a paid advertisement photo in Noticias on February 22 showing URO handing out nine million pesos in “education works.” Perhaps Guelatao has lost some part of its integrity even while the process of linking communities of the Sierra Norte is taking place, including the push for community radio which may link town to town and aid APPO participation. Local organizations have been the norm, and these hundreds of organizations at the indigenous base still exist.

Furthermore, indigenous families who migrated to the urban areas for jobs brought with them their ideas of collective action and mutual support. That is why the city of Oaxaca’s embattled neighborhoods had as central actors the poor on the barricades and women bringing food. The youth participated as marchers, barricaders and communication workers.

Civil organizations are stepping into visible lead roles again, and although a certain number of APPO supporters are still in hiding, some meet clandestinely. From February 23 to March 25 a group comprised of five civil organizations is sponsoring the “National Meeting for Communication and Society” which has attracted participants from Latin America and Mexico, as well as from Oaxaca. The indigenous assembly, as well as the state APPO assembly, calls for promotion of community radio. Print, Internet, photography and other media will be discussed in the light of countering repression and disseminating accurate information.

Another example of the increased role of civil society is the continuing forum “Dialogue for Peace and Justice,” which meets this month. The local and national human rights organizations have been working since the November attacks, both to free the prisoners and to hold counseling sessions for the victims of torture.

The tenth megamarch is called for March 8, in observance of International Women’s Day, to demand the freeing of the political prisoners and to also honor the women of the struggle. The expectations for this next march are that it will bring out the full strength of the movement.

Once again the inept government of Ruiz shot itself in the foot, because the repression was so vicious and so senseless that there is scarcely a Oaxaqueño left who does not say URO must go. From time to time I speak with someone whom I know to have been against the APPO and the popular movement, and they agree. One such person, a thirty-something woman who lives in a nice suburb and works in a city office, nodded, “We can see after that (departure) what will be possible.”

From now until the August 5 Oaxaca state elections, and then on to the October 7 municipal elections, URO will try to maintain an appearance of normalcy. He attends a few very public events, more or less surreptitiously until he pops up in a town and just as surreptitiously vanishes after cutting a ribbon. As an interesting insight into popular sentiment the state legislators (who may yet hope for re-election) already declared a failure of powers in the municipality of Zaachila. Mayor José Coronel was put aside (and promptly reappointed by URO to another government post) in favor of a man chosen by the APPO-sympathetic local assembly during the height of the first phase of the struggle.

The APPO decided to not run any candidates and to maintain its own position as an independent entity. It voted in its state assembly that those who want to run for office, for whatever party, must resign positions they hold on the APPO state council. A parallel decision was the calling of another “punishment vote,” like that of July 2, 2006.

The big advantage of the electoral season is the obvious restraint it imposes on Governor Ruiz, which applies to the APPO in no way. The state troopers guarding access to the Zócalo are down to a few at each entrance. The APPO is out and about. As I pass through the center, a certain vibrancy and air of expectation has returned.