500 Women Take Over TV Station in Bloodless Coup Against State/Corporate Media
by reposted Monday, Aug. 07, 2006 at 12:41 PM 

  author: The women of Oaxaca Rock!  
  This is just too good a story not to share. Obviously, the corporate media 
here has not been interested in telling this tale, as it could give people 
...ideas. This story, from Narco News, shares the inspiring story of women who 
took matters into their own hands when their government oppressed them and the 
corporate media refused to tell the tale. Banging on pots and pans, they took 
over Channel 9, ousted the staff, occupied the station themselves, and began 
broadcasting, for the first time, the TRUTH. 
Oaxaca's State TV Station Under Popular Control 

Women March to the Zocalo Against Governor and Take Over Channel 9 Studios 

By Nancy Davies 
Commentary from Oaxaca 

August 2, 2006 
This report appears on the internet at 
http://www.narconews.com/Issue42/article1990.html 

OAXACA CITY, August 1, 2006: In the style of the marcha de las caserolas 
(cooking-pot march) made famous in Argentina, the women of Oaxaca took to the 
streets with their pots, frying pans and spoons to beat out the call "Ruiz 
fuera!": "Governor Ruiz out!" 


Women March through the Oaxaca zocalo August 1 
Photo: D.R. 2006 Nancy Davies 
On Tuesday morning about 2,000 women gathered at the Plaza of the Seven Regions 
and marched toward the zocalo, a distance of five miles. Along the route they 
were greeted by cheering onlookers who handed them water and waved signs in 
support of the social movement that has set as its first and foremost goal the 
removal from office of Governor Ulises Ruiz Ortiz ("URO"). The women tapped out 
the rhythm of "ya cayó" ("he's already fallen") and used pan covers as cymbals. 
Many carried wooden spoons and drummed on their frying pans. 
When they gathered in the zocalo the drumming sound was like a tropical 
downpour - rain on a tin roof. Then the bells of the ex-government building, 
made over as a museum by URO, began to ring. The movement has attached ropes 
from the bell towers to the pavilion in the center of the zocalo, and over the 
sound of the tapping of thousands of spoons on pots, the bells peeled out. 

No tropical rain: the sun at mid-day glared, and many women, some of whom 
carried children, also carried sun-umbrellas. The females present ranged in age 
from babes in arms to tough old grannies. As many women wore the traditional 
aprons -a trademark of street and market vendors in Oaxaca- as wore jeans. 
Before the march dispersed at 12:30, somebody announced from the pavilion, 
"Women are going to Channel 9." The location of the state television facilities 
is a bus-ride outside the downtown area, across from the Alvaro Carillo 
Theater. 

Women have played a strong part from the beginning of the movement, as they 
comprise half of the teachers' union and/or are mothers of students affected. 
As parents they have expressed rage against lack of decent schools and 
classrooms, and most recently against paying enrollment fees for public 
schools. Free education is guaranteed by the Mexican Constitution. Fees to 
register, as well as purchase of uniforms and books, appear to have fronted yet 
another method of state theft. 

About 350 women marched into the state TV Channel 9 facilities at approximately 
1:30 p.m. Nobody stopped them. Perhaps a thousand women and children more stood 
on watch outside the building. At 3:30 the channel went off the air. Within an 
hour, the women telephoned Radio Universidad, the radio station at the Benito 
Juárez Autonomous University of Oaxaca (UABJO), to say they had two radio 
stations working from the site, one AM and one FM, but no television. They 
reported that there had been no opposition, no struggle, and nobody was hurt. 
They asked the listeners for back-up - guards, food, water, and people who know 
how to operate television cameras. 
By early evening some of the occupying force of women had returned to speak in 
person on Radio Universidad, while most remained at the television station. 

"We are not afraid," the spokeswoman said. "Whatever happens, happens. We are 
fed up with this situation. We are fighting for our children. We women cannot 
stay home." 

On the previous day, Monday July 31, the government sponsored a second 
"Guelaguetza" tourist event organized by the state's Department of Culture in 
the newly paved Llano Park, another renovated piece of cultural patrimony. 
Although Radio Universidad - yesterday the only source of public communication 
for the social movement - had suggested that people let it go, stay away and 
not provoke trouble, the students (I'm guessing by the youthful voices) rushed 
right down to Llano where the event was starting, screaming "ya cayó!" However, 
they stationed themselves at the opposite side of the park from the event. 

According reporting in the local newspaper Las Noticias, a near-confrontation 
was provoked when one youth climbed the park's monument to Benito Juárez. The 
boy who climbed the monument was literally lowered off the pedestal among a 
rain of peanuts, empty bottles of water and some stones. A movement contingent 
went to his defense. The shouts, insults and physical aggression multiplied. 
Then someone began to fire a pistol of the type, according to reports from 
APPO, used exclusively by the army. The audience fled and the event was 
canceled. 

The alleged shooter was captured by the APPO representatives. He was, it was 
reported, handled with care, not mistreated, and verified as healthy by a 
doctor before being handed over. Representatives of the federal Attorney 
General's office went to UABJO to retrieve the prisoner, identified as Isaías 
Pérez Sánchez. Perez declared his innocence. 

The news reports indicated that Pérez was dressed in civilian clothing, but is 
in fact a member of the police force. As usual for Oaxaca, it is very slow 
going to burrow down to the truth. However, as an observer I can say that if a 
shooter, whoever it might have been, wanted to hurt anybody he could have - but 
he did not. 

Therefore, I place the event in the realm of the government policy to create 
fear, anxiety and threats. Police cars stop in front of the homes of leaders 
and members of the movement. Reports of armed paramilitaries grow like weeds. 
The general atmosphere is flooded with confusion and misinformation and 
outright lies such as attributing to the teachers the unlawful behavior 
committed by thugs. 

>From the side of the social movement, the government buildings of all the 
>three branches have been blocked for four days; movement people picketed the 
>various hotels and restaurants where the state delegates and governor have 
>been trying to meet; several major highways are shut; denunciations of various 
>PRI criminals continue on Radio Universidad; as reported above yet another 
>tourist event was cancelled yesterday by protesters; and from outside the 
>city, towns call in to say they have taken back their municipal buildings from 
>the PRI caciques (bosses) who have been draining town resources while the 
>people cowered in fear of repression. 

Against this backdrop, at 7:00 this evening Channel 9 went back on the air. 
Terrible sound, full of static, but there was the APPO. Seated in front of a 
movement banner, which read "When a woman advances there is no man who stays 
behind," Daniela, a lawyer who works both with APPO and the civil rights 
commission CODEP, introduced half a dozen women (none introduced by name, I 
simply recognized Daniela). The women took turns with a hand-held microphone to 
demand that URO resign. "The women organized for a great march," one said. "We 
are in the struggle. Thanks to Ulises Ruíz the people have risen up, with 
marches, and concentrations of citizens. Channel 9 never gave us information, 
only lies. The APPO is the people. In a peaceful way we have taken the channel 
which is the public channel." 

Another woman said, "This is a historic moment." The scene backdrop, handheld, 
walked with invisible feet to stand behind her. In white letters on red 
background it read, "Fuera Ulises" - Ulises Out. 

After the women's victory broadcast, Channel 9 briefly broadcast parts of 
videos by indigenous community members. At 8:30 all was quiet. 

UPDATE, WEDNESDAY MORNING, August 2: This morning on Public Television Channel 
9 the people are showing all the videos of the June 14 attack with armed 
police, interviews with the teachers in the hospital, the marches, the rallies, 
the meetings, etc. All this material was taped as it happened, but never shown 
on any station. It's fantastic to watch it now for the first time. 




[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]





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