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From: "Dana Aldea" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: NN,Oaxaca govt reaction to small protest demanding release of Loxicha 
prisoners,Apr 07
Date: Sun, 8 Apr 2007 14:33:53 +0200

Fifty Uniformed Police Block Zo'calo Access for Eight Men, Seven Women and
Two Children

Oaxaca Government Reaction to Small Protest Demanding Release of Prisoners
Arrested in 1996 Reveals Ruiz' Worry of APPO


By Nancy Davies
Commentary from Oaxaca
April 7, 2007

Good Friday, April 6, 2007: "The APPO really has scared the shit out of the
governor," remarked the man standing next to me as we watched the
belly-to-belly stand-off with the small Loxicha group who carried a banner
demanding freedom for the prisoners of San Agusti'n Loxicha.

During the 2006-2007 arrests and struggle of the Popular Assembly of the
Peoples of Oaxaca (APPO, in its Spanish initials) the Loxicha prisoners have
largely fallen from public view, their cause overshadowed by the newer
repression, arrests and disappearances. However, murders in the Loxicha area
in the mountains south of the capital city have been commonplace, according
to the vice-president of the Organization of Indigenous Zapotec People
(OPIZ, in its Spanish initials), Juan Sosa Maldonado.

OPIZ has affiliated with the APPO, which espouses its cause. Sosa asserts
that since 2003 twenty-five "illegal executions" have been carried out
against organizers in Loxicha communities.

On Good Friday in the bright sun of the midday zo'calo, surrounded by
onlookers, Sosa and about thirteen adult indigenous Loxicha people were
holding a large banner and confronted the police, who blocked the small
contingent's access to the public square. The face-to-face line was soon
surrounded by a crowd of perhaps 250 Oaxaque~os, who stood on the sideline
or sat on the cement walls of the zo'calo. Tourists, most of them Mexican
nationals visiting for Holy Week, occupied all the cafe' tables. The police
were extremely cautious and courteous, especially to the few foreign Germans
and Americans present, directing us how to walk safely around the stand-off.
Also present were the inevitable cameras and cell-phones.

After an hour Manuel de Esesarte Pesqueira, the interim PRI municipal
president of Oaxaca City, showed up. Esesarte is a tall man, quite European
in appearance, and hence very visible. He spoke to the protesters and to the
government force, which by that time included blue-clad state police, two
grey-clad Federal Preventive Police, the regular municipal police, a few PFP
in bullet proof vests and helmets, two plain-clothes men in leather jackets,
one man in camouflage carrying a machine gun, and one Napoleonic figure in
knee high boots, khaki britches and fully formal military jacket.

Esestarte, who was appointed municipal president by Governor Ulises Ruiz
when the "elected" president Jesus Ortega Arras asked for leave of absence
after two years of invisible "service," clearly arrived as the man in
charge. After some conversation, the troops fell aside and the Loxicha
contingent passed into the zo'calo. The crowd applauded. The Loxichans
carried their banner once around the perimeter of the zo'calo, and then were
halted a second time, in the same place. Again Esesarte intervened, and
again the Loxichans paraded their banner around the zo'calo. Then they left.
That was it.

Esestarte sat down with a group of people who to my eyes appeared to be
European or American tourists. After five minutes of chatting, he also left.
Another governmental crisis averted.


Six released prisoners from the town of San Agusti'n Loxicha walked 180
kilometers from their communities in the Sierra Sur to arrive at the city of
Oaxaca on April 4. Along with ten family members of other prisoners, they
demanded the release of their twenty-four companions still held.

The almost one hundred Loxicha arrests took place in September of 1996 on
charges alleging the men were members of an armed guerrilla group, the EPR
(People's Revolutionary Army). Those charges were never substantiated. Ten
men were sentenced to thirteen and a half years. Six men were released the
first week in April. Ricardo Marti'nez Enri'quez, Urbano Ruiz Cruz, Estanislao
Marti'nez Santiago and Cirilo Ambrosio Antonio remain in prison without the
early release granted the others.

"They were promised freedom, but up to this moment the governor has not
fulfilled his promise," the Loxicha spokesperson said. "Our companions were
victims of repression, detained and tortured after a long complex judicial
process sentenced them to thirteen and a half years in prison. To date they
have served more than ten and a half years, so they should be released from
the prison."

Recently, other prisoners including the former municipal president Agusti'n
Luna Valencia, Fortino Enri'quez Herna'ndez, Abraham Garci'a Rami'rez and 
A'lvaro
Sebasti'an Rami'rez, obtained a federal court order ruling against the
"aberrant sentences" of more than thirty years. That offers a possibility
that the Tenth Circuit Court could award them liberty since they have
already served almost eleven years.

Sixty-one indigenous Zapotec prisoners, along with 250 others who were under
arrest warrants for their presumed links to the EPR, received amnesty in
December of 2000. The families of the Loxicha prisoners camped in the Oaxaca
zo'calo from 1996 until the then-governor Murat offered them a shelter near
the zo'calo. The Loxicha women and children, who were sleeping, toileting and
bathing in their encampment, left the zo'calo before renovations were
undertaken by current governor Ulises Ruiz who has sanitized the square, in
more than one sense of the word.

http://www.narconews.com/Issue45/article2620.html

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