OAXACA'S NEW GOVERNMENT CALLS FOR MIGRANT RIGHTS
Story and Photographs by David Bacon
TruthOut Report, 1/5/12
http://www.truth-out.org/oaxacas-new-government-calls-migrant-rights/1325614305


OAXACA, MEXICO  - The Oaxacan Institute for Attention to Migrants, 
and its director Rufino Dominguez, called for a new era of respect 
for the rights of migrants, in commorating the International Day of 
the Migrant in the Palacio del Gobierno, Oaxaca's state capitol 
building.  Representing the newly-elected state government, Dominguez 
paid tribute to the contributions of the braceros, the first of 
Oaxaca's migrant workers to travel to the United States. from 1942 to 
1964, and to the women who cared for the families they left behind. 



Around the balconies of the palacio's courtyard hung photographs 
showing the lives of current migrants from Oaxaca, working as farm 
laborers in California.  Migrant rights activists, artisans and 
public officials spoke about the important role migration continues 
to play in Oaxaca's economic, social, political and family life.  The 
state, in southern Mexico, is the source of one of the largest waves 
of migration from Mexico to the U.S.

Dominguez, the former coordinator of the Binational Front of 
Indigenous Organizations, which organizes indigenous migrants in both 
Mexico and the U.S., was appointed director of the IOAM by Oaxaca's 
new governor, Gabino Cue Monteagudo.  Cue defeated the PRI, the party 
that governed Oaxaca for the previous 80 years.  In an interview with 
David Bacon, Dominguez described the different road the new 
government is taking to ensure social justice for Oaxacan migrants 
today:




We can't tell the U.S. government, or the governments of California 
and other states, to respect the rights of our people who are living 
there, if we ourselves are not respecting the rights of migrants here 
in Oaxaca.  Many migrants passing through Oaxaca from Central America 
and other places suffer systematic violations of their human rights. 
Have we just paid attention to migrants in the U.S. because they send 
dollars home?  Sometimes the problems of migrants within Mexico are 
even greater than those we have in the U.S. 

Oaxacans are also migrants within our own state, like those who work 
in the coconut palms on the coast.  About 30,000 Oaxacans migrate for 
work without leaving the state, and we've never paid attention to 
them.  Another 300,000 live in Mexico City and states in the north, 
like Sinaloa, Sonora and Baja California.  The Institute hasn't paid 
attention to them in the past either. 



And we've never consulted the people who actually live in the U.S. 
about  our activity there, or asked for their opinions.  We want a 
different vision, a more level or equal relationship where we're not 
dictating policies because we're the government, but asking people 
for their input and opinions.

Our starting point is to understand the need for economic 
development, because the reason for migration is the lack of work and 
opportunity in people's communities of origin.  If we don't attack 
the roots of migration, it will continue to grow. There's a fear of 
investing in our own people, but there's no other way.  We have to 
have economic development, and respect for the human rights of 
migrants as they come and go.



We also have to tell people about the risks of migrating.  In Durango 
and Tamaulipas they've found hidden graves of many migrants, and the 
surprising thing is that the big majority killed with such cruelty 
are Mexicans.  It's not just a risk to cross the border into the 
U.S..  You're risking your life migrating here in your own country. 
People also need to understand that the economic crisis in the U.S. 
hasn't gotten any better.  When you get there, your chance of finding 
work is worse than ever, and there's a lot of competition for jobs. 

So we have to work on implementing the right to not migrate, while 
protecting the ability to migrate safely, making sure that people's 
dignity and human rights are respected. 



In March alone, four thousand migrants were sent back after trying to 
cross into the U.S.  That tells us that there's still a huge number 
of people trying to cross, and that the number isn't getting any 
smaller.  The economic pressure on people to migrate, and the 
violation of human rights on the border, are still part of our 
reality.  Migrants are raped and beaten, and recruited into criminal 
gangs.  Over 300 Oaxacans have disappeared, and we don't know if 
they're alive or dead.  Their families haven't heard from them.  Our 
state is responsible for them, along with the Federal government. 
Yet we don't accept responsibility for the economic development that 
could change it.  This silence is a disgrace, at the same time we've 
become so dependent on the remittances migrant send back to their 
families..



The labor of migrants in the U.S. has been used throughout history. 
They tell us to come work, and then when there's an economic crisis, 
we're blamed for it.  They accuse us of robbing other people's jobs, 
and our rights are not respected.  These new state laws in Alabama, 
Florida, South Carolina, Arizona and elsewhere are not just 
anti-immigrant but inhuman.  Meanwhile, the current U.S. 
administration has hardened its policy of detaining and deporting 
immigrants unjustly, which accomplishes nothing.  In IOAM we feel 
like we're just shouting at the wall -- they don't hear us. 

I don't believe that a program of guest workers or braceros will 
resolve these problems of migration.  First, it perpetuates a 
dependence on remittances.  We also know from our experience with the 
bracero program in the 1950s and 60s that these programs don't work. 
We have many former braceros who are still fighting to get the 10% of 
their wages that was withheld during those years.  Current H2A and 
H2B programs give people a work visa, but the rights of workers in 
these programs are not respected.  Often they aren't paid legal 
wages, they live in terrible conditions in substandard housing, and 
they have no right to organize or make demands on their employers. 



With a green card, or residence visa, people migrating have some 
security.  That doesn't exist with a guest worker visa or crossing 
with a coyote.  If people's rights are violated, if they're not paid 
adequately, if they can't earn Social Security to allow them to 
eventually retire, then this system is worthless.  It's just 
producing throw-away workers, whose labor gets used but who have no 
benefits.  So why are we talking about more programs that fail to 
respect human and labor rights, and which don't guarantee housing, 
education and healthcare?

If we begin by talking about rights and decent wages and conditions, 
maybe we can see a way forward.  But if it's just "come sell your 
labor" with no respect for your rights, these programs are worthless. 
The governments of both Mexico and the U.S. must prioritize human and 
labor rights.



We will work with everyone.  We are a government of everyone.  We 
say, we are all Oaxaca, with a government for all of us.  So we have 
to implement this idea in practice.




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

__________________________________

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



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