A potentially revolutionary situation, at least in the South, where a
far higher level of support for AMLO has been found than in the North.
Can AMLO nationalize local combustions? -- Yoshie

<http://www.nytimes.com/2006/08/24/world/americas/24mexico.html>
August 24, 2006
Violent Civil Unrest Tightens Hold on a Mexican City
By JAMES C. McKINLEY Jr.

OAXACA, Mexico, Aug. 23 — For three months, civil unrest has gripped
this lovely colonial city like a hound with a rabbit, leaving two
people dead, crippling the tourist industry and shuttering schools.

The original cause of the strife — a teachers' strike for better pay —
has become lost in the escalating violence and the revolutionary
demands of the protesters, who now demand that Gov. Ulises Ruiz step
down.

The teachers' union has been joined by scores of social organizations,
some of them with leftist philosophies.

They have shut down highways, taken over five radio stations, burned
more than a dozen buses, blocked off the city's historic square,
seized government offices, destroyed the stage for an annual cultural
fair and barricaded tourists in their hotels. The state government has
lost control of the center of the city, including its own offices, and
is working out of improvised quarters with cellphones. Though each
side has asked for federal intervention, President Vicente Fox has
refused to send in troops. He has dispatched negotiators from the
Interior and Labor Ministries, who have been unsuccessful in resolving
the conflict.

On the national level, Mexico has been engulfed in a political crisis
since the leftist presidential candidate, Andrés Manuel López Obrador,
narrowly lost the July 2 election, according to an official tally. He
has accused his conservative rival, Felipe Calderón, of fraud and
mounted similar protests in Mexico City, taking over the central
square.

Though the conflict here started well before the election, it has
added to the country's overall angst, feeding fears that left-wing
groups will use Mr. López Obrador's movement to foment unrest, with
heavy-handed counterattacks by people in power.

Governor Ruiz, of the Institutional Revolutionary Party, which long
ruled this state with a iron hand, has accused local leaders of Mr.
López Obrador's party, the Party of the Democratic Revolution, of
taking part in the protests, adding yet another layer of politics to
the conflict.

Early on Tuesday, police officers in a convoy that had been sent to
clear blocked streets opened fire on a radio station that the
protesters had seized. In the gunfire, Lorenzo San Pablo Cervantes,
52, an architect who worked for the state, was killed, the police
said. It is unclear whether he was a bystander or was supporting the
strikers.

The protesters seized about a dozen radio stations on Monday afternoon
after unidentified gunmen destroyed the broadcasting equipment of
Channel 9, a public television and radio station the strikers and
their allies commandeered early this month to spread their version of
events, the authorities said.

The state attorney general, Lizbeth Caña, said someone had fired at
the officers from roofs near the station, starting the gunfight. But
witnesses said the police had opened fire twice without provocation.

"They are the ones who brought arms, and we had nothing but rocks,"
said Manuel Díaz, 40, a teacher, who was keeping a tense guard on
Wednesday with an ax handle outside the radio station where the
shooting had occurred. "Ruiz talks out of both sides of his mouth. On
the television he calls on us to negotiate. But in the streets at
night, he tries to kill us."

On Aug. 10, Eleuterio José Jiménez Colmenares, 50, an auto mechanic
and the husband of a teacher, was shot and killed during a march to
support the strike as he chased youths who had thrown rocks at
marchers.

Enrique Rueda Pacheco, the leader of the 70,000-member teachers'
union, said the deaths, and Mr. Ruiz's use of tear gas and riot police
in an attempt to dislodge the protesters from the city center on June
14, had made it impossible for the teachers to accept anything less
than his resignation. Their demands for more pay are no longer the
primary issue, Mr. Rueda Pacheco said.

"The fundamental problem has been the lack of interest of the state
and federal governments," he said in an interview. "They bet the
teachers would just go away."

Miguel Ángel Concha, a spokesman for Governor Ruiz, said the state
lacks the money to meet the teachers' salary demands. The teachers had
asked for a pay package that would have cost $150 million, while the
state's final offer in June was about $8.5 million. The teachers also
have asked for about a dozen improvements, including new books and
more classrooms, for a state school system that serves hundreds of
thousands of students.

Mr. Ruiz's aides acknowledged that the government made an enormous
error on June 14 when it used force, angering many teachers who were
used to an annual strike and a resulting pay increase. An unconfirmed
rumor that a woman and two children had died in the attack because of
tear gas has become gospel among the protesters, though no bodies have
been found.

Beyond the salary dispute, however, are old political rivalries. Mr.
Ruiz narrowly won election over a leftist candidate in 2004, and many
of the teachers and other protesters view his victory as illegitimate.
They also accuse his police force of at least 35 political killings of
civilians, which the government strongly denies. Finally, Mr. Ruiz
vowed to end the yearly teachers' strikes that previous governors had
routinely settled by granting raises.

Ms. Caña, the attorney general, charges that groups seeking to
overthrow the government have infiltrated the union. "These people are
saying 'Hit me, so I can denounce you for hitting me,' " she said.
"They are generating instability and chaos."

On Tuesday night, demonstrators gathered in the Zócalo, the central
square, to watch a documentary made by protesters on televisions they
had set up. The film accuses Mr. Ruiz not only of killing scores of
his political enemies, but of being a pawn for global capitalism.

Now, the once jewel-like center of Oaxaca is a mess. Protesters have
stolen buses and used pickup trucks to block streets, along with
rocks, barbed wire and ropes. Graffiti declaring Mr. Ruiz an assassin
defaces most of the buildings. Tents and tarps shelter protesters, who
burn tires and garbage at night, keeping an eye out for the police.
The city's once-prosperous tourism industry is gasping for air. More
than 1,000 hotel workers have been laid off, and tourists have
canceled reservations well into 2007. The hotel and motel association
estimates that the industry has lost $150 million in the last three
months, not to mention the embarrassing cancellation of the
Guelaguetza cultural festival here.

"No one has won anything here," said Fredy Alcántara, the president of
the association. "No one has come out ahead." The federal government
must intervene, he said, adding, "We are desperate."


--
Yoshie
<http://montages.blogspot.com/>
<http://mrzine.org>
<http://monthlyreview.org/>

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