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From: "Dana Aldea" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: NN,Zapatista Comandantes Arrive at Mexico-US Border,Apr 11
Date: Thu, 12 Apr 2007 14:42:56 +0200

Marcos: "We Will Come and Stay With You, Without Guns, Only With Our Words"

Zapatista Comandantes Arrive at Mexico-US Border

By Brenda Norrell
Special to The Narco News Bulletin
April 11, 2007

MAGDALENA DE KINO, Sonora, Mexico - Zapatistas' Subcomandante Marcos and 10
comandantes from Chiapas arrived on their way to the Cucapa' (Cocapah) Peace
Camp and were welcomed by O'odham and friends in the state of Sonora.

Marcos said he will return here in less than two weeks to announce plans for
the Intercontinental Indigenous Conference, planned for northwest Mexico for
the fall of 2007.

Marcos said he hopes the Intercontinental gathering will "touch the hearts
and recuperate the souls."

"When Indigenous Peoples come together from all regions, they will realize
that money means nothing when compared to the values of Indigenous Peoples,"
Marcos said in an interview, speaking in Spanish and English.

The Zapatista delegation was enroute to the Cucapa' Peace Camp in Baja
California, in the Cucapa' community of El Mayor, 40 miles south of Mexicali
near the Arizona/California border. The camp has been underway since fishing
season began in March and continues through May.

The delegation of Mayan Comandantes from Chiapas included four women and six
men. Comandantas Kelly, Susana, Yolanda and Dalia and Comandantes Tacho,
David, Eduardo, Guillermo, Emiliano and Masho.

Marcos said the Cucapa people have lived in their territory for 9,000 years
and were fishing there long before Spain, the United States or Mexico
existed.

"They take care of the land, the air, the water, trees, the natural world."


"We are the Guardians"

Marcos said the government of Mexico has falsely accused the Cucapa' of
destroying the natural world. At the same time, the Mexican military
pretends to be fighting the drug traffickers.

"The Mexican Army is not fighting against drug dealers. They are fighting
against Indian people."

"The Cucapa' are doing the same thing they have been doing for 9,000 years.
The Cucapa and other Indian people called for this camp in defense of
nature. So they can fish without arrests or being put in jail," Marcos said.

Marcos visited the Indian tribes in northwest Mexico during the Zapatistas'
Other Campaign in the fall of 2006. The neighboring Quilihua women had taken
a vow to stop having children and become extinct rather than try to survive
without their ability to fish.

"We said we will come and stay with you, without guns, only with our words,"
Marcos said in the interview Sunday.

Marcos urged American Indians in the United States to unite with Zapatistas
in the struggle for Indigenous rights.

Marcos said before the days of politicians and enterprises, Indian people
were here.
"We, the Indian people, lived here on this land. The money people came and
brought drugs, prostitution and all of the diseases of the money people,"
Marcos said in English.

Marcos said the world has not responded to the suffering of Indigenous
Peoples.

"The United Nations does not have ears to hear that pain," Marcos said in an
interview.
"It is a shame."

Marcos pointed out that the Tohono O'odham people live on both sides of the
international border, in Sonora, Mexico and in Arizona in the United States.

"But it is the same people. If the O'odham in Mexico and the O'odham in the
United States come together, they can realize a force more powerful than
money."

Marcos said that even when Indian people have money, there are those that
say, "An Indian is an Indian.

"No matter how much they say they love us, it is not true. They can not love
us because of the color of our skin."

Marcos called on Indigenous Peoples to claim their destiny as Guardians of
the Earth. "Everything that is life will be killed. We must join the fight
to save the earth. The gods gave us that mission. We must take care of the
earth together, but with respect for our differences, Yaqui, Mayo Tzetzal.
Each people have their own identity, depending on their culture."

"The people with money said we are a barbarious people, but our people are
people of peace. We fight only if they attack us. The government thinks we
are failures, but they have to know that we are Guardians of this land."

In the state of Sonora, south of the Arizona border, the Zapatistas were
greeted by O'odham in Mexico, Lt. Gov. Jose Garcia, wife Maria and mother
Elena Garcia. The delegation stayed at the ecotourism center south of
Magdalena, Rancho el Penasco, Casa de Ecoturismo, where the Other Campaign
stayed in October during the listening session with O'odham. During their
overnight stay, Zapatistas rested and enjoyed meals of chicken mole, Sonoran
tepary beans and dried beef.

The Zapatista delegation was followed by Mexican undercover police.
Initially one vehicle from the state of Sinoloa was parked at the entrance
to the center, but the number grew to six vehicles, including one local
police vehicle, with four undercover vehicles following the delegation as
they departed for Cucapa in the state of Baja California. Attacks on the
Zapatistas by paramilitary forces have increased in Chiapas, where
corporations seek to seize the land and resources.

Marcos invited the public to the gathering at Rancho el Penasco, Casa de
Ecoturismo, 11 kilometers south of Magdalena on the highway to Hermosillo,
on Sunday, April 22, 2007, to hear the announcement about the
Intercontinental gathering to be held in the fall of 2007 in northwestern
Mexico. Magdalena is a one and one-half hour drive south of Nogales,
Arizona.

News reporter Brenda Norrell can be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://www.narconews.com/Issue45/article2623.html

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