CAN THE TRIQUIS GO HOME?
By David Bacon
New America Media, 1/19/12
http://newamericamedia.org/2012/01/can-the-triquis-go-home.php

OAXACA, MEXICO -- Just before Christmas, the 
women and children who'd spent 17 months living 
on the sidewalk outside the governor's palace in 
Oaxaca announced they were going home. In the 
spring of 2010, these refugees abandoned their 
homes in San Juan Copala, the ceremonial center 
of the Triqui people. Many houses were burned 
after they left.

Stringing tarps and ropes across the palacio's 
outdoor colonnade, they set up their planton, an 
impromptu community of sleeping and cooking areas 
across the sidewalk from the zocalo, the plaza at 
Oaxaca's heart. It looked hauntingly similar to 
the settlements of the Occupy protesters that 
spread across the United States last fall, but 
rather than fighting to remain in their tents, 
the Triqui families in the planton were fighting 
for the right not to live there, for the right to 
go home.

Finally, this December, they announced an 
agreement with representatives of Gabino Cue, 
elected governor last July, who promised to 
protect the families if they returned to San Juan 
Copala. Still, many question whether they can 
really go back safely.  Even more importantly, 
they ask what can bring an end to the violence 
that has claimed the lives of at least 500 people 
over the last two decades.

This question is not just debated on the sidewalk 
by the zocalo, or only in Oaxaca.  It is asked, 
albeit in whispers, by migrant farm workers in 
Baja California and Sinaloa, in northern Mexico, 
and in Hollister and Greenfield, in California's 
Salinas Valley.



Indigenous Triqui children march through the 
streets of Oaxaca on December 19, 2011, to 
protest a wave of killihngs in their home 
community of San Juan Copala.

Mixtecos have been leaving Oaxaca for decades, 
driven mostly by the endemic poverty of the 
Mexican countryside, says Gaspar Rivera Salgado, 
a Mixteco professor at UCLA and past coordinator 
of the Binational Front of Indigenous 
Organizations. Yet for many years the Triquis, 
who were equally poor and live in the same 
region, stayed put.  Their migration only began 
when the violence in their communities made life 
unbearable.

Once displaced, they began to migrate within the 
Mixteca region, then within Oaxaca, and then 
within Mexico.  They traveled north, following 
other Oaxacans to San Quintin in the 1980s, and 
then in the 1990s, to California. 

Triqui migrants might have escaped the violence, 
but not the political presence of the groups they 
were fleeing. Wherever they went, the Movement 
for the Unification of the Triqui Struggle (MULT) 
and the Social Welfare Group of the Triqui Region 
(UBISORT) sent agents, requiring people to pay 
monetary quotas and participate in mobilizations.

In the 1980s, Triqui activists organized MULT. 
"It was a grassroots organization to fight the 
caciques (rural political bosses) over control of 
land, forests and other natural resources," says 
Rivera Salgado.  "The caciques were so violent 
that MULT members had to arm themselves. 
Eventually, those armed men became a paramilitary 
group. The caciques were overcome, but what began 
as a grassroots organization became something 
different.  There was no transition to a civil 
society form of organization."



A Triqui boy carries a sign that says, "We want 
justice for the widows, the orphans and our 
injured.

Eventually MULT itself fractured into factions. 
One faction became UBISORT, which began fighting 
MULT for political control of Triqui communities. 
Oaxaca's repressive state government used the 
conflict to enhance its own control. 

UBISORT was organized with the support of 
then-governor Jose Murat, and became a political 
support base for Oaxaca's old governing party, 
the PRI (Party of the Institutionalized 
Revolution).  MULT organized its own political 
party, the Popular Unity Party.  But behind the 
parties were the guns.

"A civil war went on between them," Rivera 
Salgado says. In 2006, Raul Marcial Perez, a 
leader of UBISORT, was assassinated. Then in 
October, 2010, Heriberto Pazos, the founder of 
MULT, was gunned down in the streets of Oaxaca 
city. 

  In the only municipio that remained in Triqui 
hand, San Martin Itunyoso, Antonio Jacinto López 
Martínez, a MULT leader, was elected president in 
2004, but then couldn't take office because of 
threats, and fled to the nearby city of Tlaxiaco. 
Last October, as he was crossing the street there 
with two members of his family, a gunman shot him 
in the head. Many others were killed in years of 
violence and retribution.



The Triquis attempted to create an autonomous 
town in San Juan Copala, and were expelled by 
paramilitary gangs.  They carried crosses with 
the names of people who were killed.

The High Cost of Migration

For Triquies, migration has had a high cost - 
they've had to fight for survival wherever they 
went.  "They faced tremendous racism and 
prejudice," Rivera Salgado charges.  "They're 
always the outsiders, treated like savages."

Over the course of some 25 years, so many have 
fled the political murders plaguing their 
homeland that they've formed towns like Nueva 
Colonia Triqui, or New Triqui Town, in Baja's San 
Quintin Valley.  In that colonia, or in 
California's Triqui neighborhoods, people ask 
whether peace is possible, and if it were, would 
they go home too?

"People left looking for a better future, but 
they worry about the safety of their families at 
home," says activist Elvira Santos (whose name 
has been changed), pointing to the fear that many 
Triquis share of reprisals for speaking publicly 
not only against themselves, but also against 
their families in Oaxaca.  "They'll think twice 
before going back because the conflicts and the 
same armed groups are still there."

In north Mexico, migrants found farm labor camps 
with dirt floors and no electricity.  When they 
wanted homes for children and families, Triquis 
and other indigenous migrants had to mount land 
invasions, building houses on Federal land, and 
then awaiting the police sent to evict them. 



The march called on the governor, Gabino Cue, to 
guarantee their safety when they try to return to 
the town and to arrest those responsible for the 
killings.

In one of the most celebrated cases, Julio 
Sandoval, a Triqui leader from Yosoyuxi, was 
imprisoned for two years in the penitentiary in 
Ensenada for helping families settle in Cañon 
Buenavista.

When Triqui migrant farm workers arrived in 
Greenfield, the local police and legal system 
condemned them for cultural practices like home 
births or early marriages, or for drinking in 
public, a normal activity at home. Eventually 
they reached agreement with the local police 
chief, who even set up a desk in the police 
station for a Triqui leader to provide 
translation. 

Then town residents, who saw the migrants as 
unwelcome invaders, tried to fire the chief.  The 
Triqui community by then numbered at least 3,000 
people.  Helped by the United Farm Workers, 
migrants marched through town to assert their 
right to live there.

Roots of the Violence

Adelfo Regino Montes, a Mixe indigenous leader 
and writer for Mexico's leftwing daily, La 
Jornada, traces the violence in the Triqui region 
to "political submission, territorial 
disintegration, economic exploitation, racial 
discrimination and exclusion in every aspect of 
daily life." 



Triqui men joined the women and children in the march.

After Mexico won its independence, Triquis 
controlled three municipios, or counties, where 
they were the majority.  That gave them some 
degree of political power.  After the Mexican 
Revolution, however, two of the municipios were 
dissolved, and much of the community's autonomy 
was lost.

"San Juan Copala itself was no longer a 
municipio," Santos explains.  "Many mestizos 
[people of mixed indigenous and Spanish ancestry] 
didn't want Triquis to have power.  They 
introduced alcohol and arms in order to gain 
control of the land and resources."  Those 
caciques  ruled Triqui towns using repression and 
violence.

"[Triqui municipios] were dispersed into 
districts where non-indigenous people are the 
majority," Regino Montes said in a 2010 Jornada 
column.  "The big majority of Triqui communities 
have been excluded from any decisions that affect 
their lives and destinies, undermining their 
autonomy and freedom to make their own choices. 
Those decision remained in the hands of the 
caciques, the state and federal governments, and 
the party leaders of the PRI."

  In the only municipio that remained in Triqui 
hands, San Martin Itunyoso, Antonio Jacinto López 
Martínez, a MULT leader, was elected president in 
2004, but then couldn't take office because of 
threats, and fled to the nearby city of Tlaxiaco. 
Last October, as he was crossing the street there 
with two members of his family, a gunman shot him 
in the head.



The women carry a banner that says, "Neither 
forgive nor forget, punishment to the assassins. 
Autonomous town of San Juan Copala."

"The violence is created by a lack of the 
assertion of the rule of law.  But the government 
has excused its failure to stop it with such 
racist ideas as 'Triquis are savages and 
uncivilized,'" Rivera Salgado charges.

Indigenous self-government

Looking for a way out themselves, in 2007 Triqui 
activists created the autonomous municipio of San 
Juan Copala, inspired by the experiences of the 
Zapatistas in nearby Chiapas.  "They recreated 
the system of indigenous self-government," Regino 
Montes wrote, "the only real possibility for 
peace in the region."

"They were looking for a political alternative," 
adds Rivera Salgado, "and they used the political 
process.  They weren't armed.  And they won in a 
clean election."

Those activists had roots in another splinter 
from MULT, called MULT Independiente, or MULT-I. 
UBISORT and MULT united against them, and 
eventually laid siege to the town, which went on 
for months.  A number of residents were killed. 



A Triqui girl carries a sign that says, "Long 
live the autonomy of the native people of the 
planet earth."

On April 27, 2010, a caravan of Mexican and 
European human rights activists set out for San 
Juan Copala.  They were stopped at a roadblock, 
and gunmen began shooting.  Beatriz Alberta 
Cariño Trujillo, a Mexican human rights activist, 
and a Finnish supporter Tyri Antero Jaakkola, 
were murdered.  The others fled into the hills.

Human rights lawyer Gabriela Jimenez Rodriguez 
said she was captured by hooded men who told her 
they were from UBISORT and MULT.  "They told us 
than no one could pass here, that it was their 
territory."  Finally she and others were 
released.  Police recovered the two bodies, but 
never tried to enter the town.

On August 22, three more people were killed and 
two wounded, as they drove to nearby Santa Cruz 
Tilapia, where residents were also trying to 
establish an autonomous municipio.   One was the 
town leader, Antonio Ramirez Lopez, 78 years old. 

Then in September, 500 paramilitaries surrounded 
San Juan Copala and told supporters of the 
autonomous municipio they had 24 hours to leave. 
"That wasn't just a threat," Reyna Martinez, one 
of the town's leaders, told La Jornada. "They did 
the same thing in San Miguel Copala, where they 
killed twelve of our colleagues in the city hall. 
Neither state nor Federal authorities dare even 
to come into San Juan Copala."



Women and children walked past the street vendors 
selling toys in the city's main plaza, with the 
star and masked figure on their banner showing 
their connection to the Zapatista movement.

No need for protective measures?

Oaxaca's governor at the time, Ulisses Ruiz, 
notorious for his violent suppression of the 
teachers' strike of 2006, said there were no 
gunmen, deaths or disappearances in the Triqui 
region, and no need for protective measures for 
residents.  By that time, families who'd fled 
were already living in the planton outside his 
office, and some had gone to Mexico City to set 
up a similar planton there.  "They got us to 
leave," said another leader, Marcos Albino Ortiz, 
"but that doesn't mean we've given up."

Last July, however, Gabino Cue, who Ruiz defeated 
in the election of 2004, beat the PRI candidate 
for governor.  UBISORT campaigned for the PRI. 
MULT's PUP ran its own candidate, viewed largely 
as an attempt to draw votes from Cue.  After the 
election, Cue put Region Montes in charge of the 
state Secretariat of Indigenous Affairs.  Rufino 
Dominguez, former coordinator for the Frente 
Indigena de Organizaciones Binacionales, was 
appointed director of the Oaxacan Institute for 
Attention to Migrants.

The women in the planton didn't stop 
demonstrating against the government, however, 
and the violence continued.  In August three 
MULTI members were killed in Agua Fria.  Their 
bodies were brought to the planton for a public 
funeral.  In October, Reyna Martinez was arrested 
with two dozen others for occupying a piece of 
land near the airport, in an act of civil 
disobedience.  They demanded that the new state 
government provide protection to allow their 
return to San Juan Copala, pay for the 
destruction of peoples' homes there, and arrest 
those responsible for the killings.  And in 
December women and children in bright red huipils 
marched through Oaxaca city, demanding the 
government accept the conditions.

In response to the pressure, Rufino Juarez, a 
UBISORT leader, was arrested in May for killing 
MULTI activist Celestino Hernandez Cruz a year 
earlier.  Cue's administration then issued arrest 
orders for a number of others, but so far none 
have been detained, with one exception. 
Authorities did arrest a MULTI founder and 
retired teacher, Miguel Angel Velasco, accusing 
him of arranging the disappearance of two young 
women from MULT in 2007.



The planton in front of the governor's palace on the main square in Oaxaca.

Nevertheless, Marcos Albino Ortiz, says that the 
state government "has fulfilled about half of 
what it agreed to.  We're going back to San Juan 
Copala, and we're talking with the communities 
there to ensure they support our decision.  Our 
objective is to pacify the region."  He predicts 
that the state and federal police will provide an 
escort, along with representatives of the 
Interamerican Commission for Human Rights, which 
has issued orders of protection for many of the 
activists.  Some 135 families have received some 
restitution for their burned homes, he says.

Can Triqsuis go home?

To ensure peace in San Juan Copala, however, some 
police presence there is unavoidable, at least in 
the short run, Rivera Salgado believes.  "The 
litmus test is whether the government will create 
the conditions in which people can go home," he 
says.  "You can't change overnight a situation 
that's existed for 30 years.   In the short term 
they have to disarm the armed people.  This can 
create political space.  But military occupation 
is not a long-term solution.  People need to 
become a force for change themselves."

Following the ambush of the caravan, Regino 
Montes asserted, "The solution must be the 
recognition and respect, in law and in action, 
for the process of Triqui autonomy."  Now he is a 
responsible official in a government that has the 
power to implement that recommendation.

Peace in Oaxaca may encourage Triqui migrants to 
return, but going home won't be easy.  No one can 
afford to go back to Oaxaca, just to take a look. 



A child sleeps in a planton set up by the Triquis 
in Mexico City's zocalo, or main square.

Triqui migration hit the U.S. after the amnesty 
of the 1986 Immigration Reform and Control Act, 
so most people have no legal immigration status. 
They can cross the border into Mexico, but coming 
back to the U.S. is a much bigger problem.  It's 
expensive -- $2500 for a coyote for the crossing 
is two months wages for a farm worker.  Plus, 
it's more dangerous every year, as people get 
pushed by increased enforcement into the most 
remote sections of the border to cross. 

Going back home is a permanent decision, not a 
temporary visit.  Nor has the fear of violence 
there diminished.  In the last few years, five 
Triqui families even won political asylum, helped 
by San Francisco's Lawyers Committee for Civil 
Rights.  Nevertheless, "most migrants get much 
harsher treatment now," according to Rivera 
Salgado. "The current enforcement policy is based 
on excluding them, through violence and jail at 
the border, and isolation and fear in their 
community.  The idea is to make life so hard for 
them in the U.S. they'll have to leave.  But 
where are they supposed to go?"

"I think a lot of people would go home if they 
could," Santos believes.  "Our land is very 
productive, and as farm workers here we've seen 
new crops that we could grow in Oaxaca.  But we 
need jobs and schools there, and especially 
security.  Right now, we don't know if we can 
even hope for that.  Some of us have lost hope. 
Our governments have made these promises before. 
It would be good if it were true this time, but 
we have to see if their actions match their 
words.""

"And where is home?" asks Rivera Salgado.  "Lots 
of Triquis have grown up in San Quintin or 
Greenfield by now.  Yet the first generation 
still yearns for connection to San Juan Copala. 
It is part of their identity and sense of 
belonging.  Everybody needs that."


For more articles and images, see  http://dbacon.igc.org

See also Illegal People -- How Globalization 
Creates Migration and Criminalizes Immigrants 
(Beacon Press, 2008)
Recipient: C.L.R. James Award, best book of 2007-2008
http://www.beacon.org/productdetails.cfm?PC=2002

See also the photodocumentary on indigenous migration to the US
Communities Without Borders (Cornell University/ILR Press, 2006)
http://www.cornellpress.cornell.edu/cup_detail.taf?ti_id=4575

See also The Children of NAFTA, Labor Wars on the 
U.S./Mexico Border (University of California, 
2004)
http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/9989.html
--
__________________________________

David Bacon, Photographs and Stories
http://dbacon.igc.org

__________________________________
-- 
__________________________________

David Bacon, Photographs and Stories
http://dbacon.igc.org

__________________________________

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



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