From
A World to Win News Service;
Following is a leaflet being circulated by the
Revolutionary Communist Organization of Mexico (OCR) that also appeared in
Aurora Roja (aurora-roja.blogspot.mx).
This
past 2 October saw spirited and combative commemorations of the massacre of
hundreds of students, youth and other people demonstrating against the
government at Plaza Tlatelolco on the eve of the Mexico City Olympic Games in
1968. That event intensified a long period of upheaval and revolt that
reverberates throughout Mexico today. This year striking teachers furious at
government attempts to weaken the educational system and dismantle their union
took to the streets in large numbers that morning, and the afternoon saw major
clashes between students and youth and police.
This
is the context for a call for a National Week of Resistance entitled "Stop
the War on the People" whose initial signatories include numerous
professors, schoolteachers, union representatives, lawyers and journalists, a
street vendors' group and people from indigenous (Indian) communities, among
others. The call denounces more than 100,000 murders, 25,000 disappearances and
4,000 femicides (murders of women).
Let's
unleash a torrent of struggle to stop the war against the people! If you hate
the state's brutality and injustice, you have to act now!
The
same state that 45 years ago murdered hundreds of activists on 2 October 1968
is now executing, torturing, jailing and disappearing people with impunity.
This is truly a war against the people.
The
death squads run by the Navy and the Army are murdering innocent people. In
September 2011, the bodies of 35 brutally murdered people were thrown alongside
a motorway in Boca del Rio in the state of Veracruz. They were allegedly killed
by the "MataZetas" [supposed vigilantes targeting the Zeta drug
organization], but, as we exposed at that time, the victims were not Zetas but
innocent people, and these so-called MataZetas acted just like a death squad.
Now a member of an elite Navy unit has confirmed that the killers were Navy
troops. The existence of this and other death squads whose members were trained
in Colombia and the United States was documented in the book published by
Parliament, Escuadrones
de la muerte en Mexico (Ricardo Monreal, Camara de Diputados, 2013). These secret
counter-insurgency units murder people arbitrarily, especially poor people,
even before any insurgency takes place. The murders are part of a war against
the people. What we are witnessing is a "preventive" war whose
purpose is to terrorize and demoralize the people on the bottom of society,
especially youth who have no future under this system, before they have a
chance to rise up and struggle for the road to liberation.
The
police and armed forces in general are killing and disappearing many innocent
people under the pretext of combating "organized crime," when
actually they are in collusion with it at the federal, state and local levels
of government. Further, the government uses narcos to commit political
assassinations, as has been documented by the Inter-American Human Rights
Commission (CIDH) in its Second Report on the Situation of Human Rights
Defenders in the Americas. Despite government propaganda, there have been more
than 13,000 such killings so far this year, which is almost the same level as
2012.
The
state represses and disarms community police and guards [informal, armed
village defence groups organized to keep out marauders of all types] while at
the same time militarizing many areas, especially indigenous communities and
regions. Instead of pursuing the criminals, they are attacking people who are
defending themselves against the mining and energy corporations that are
destroying the environment, and against the soldiers and police who are raping
women and arresting or murdering political activists. Last August some 6,000
uniformed members of the Navy, Army and Federal Police raided a mountain area in
the state of Guerrero to arrest 29 members of a coordinating committee of
community authorities and self-defence organizations, the CRAC-PC (Coordinadora
Regional de Autoridades Comunitarias-Policía Comunitaria). The coordinator in
Olinala, Nestora Salgado Garcia, was held in a maximum security prison en
Tepic, Nayarit, under trumped-up kidnapping charges. When community police
members protested this injustice, more of them were arrested. The state
government of Guerrero and the federal Attorney General try to either dismantle
these organizations or bring them under control by (making them part of an
official "rural police". Moreover, in September, a Chiapas court
approved the 60-year jail term meted out to the Tzotzil [Indian] schoolteacher
Alberto Patishtan, who has already served 13 years for a crime he did not
commit.
The
state continues to cover up the murders of women that are becoming even more
numerous in some states, and it threatens the victim's family members when they
demand justice. It covers up the disappearances of these young women and
protects the networks of sex-slave traffickers. At the same time, it imprisons
women for having an abortion or even a spontaneous miscarriage. These criminal
laws deny women their basic right to decide what to do with their bodies and
their lives.
The
Navy, Army, police, National Migration Institute agents and hired killers work
together to kidnap and disappear immigrants from Central America – somewhere
between 10,000 and 80,000 in the last six years. They serve U.S. interests
(reducing immigration) and take their share, forcing immigrants to work as
slaves for the drug cartels and killing those who refuse, like the 72 executed
a few years ago in San Fernando, Tamaulipas. The Meso-American Migrant Movement
(MMM) says it has documented between 70,000 and 80,000 cases of Central
American migrants who disappeared during President Felipe Calderon's six years
in office. About 30 percent were women and girls, many of them sold to the
trafficking networks in Tlaxcala, Puebla and Chiapas.
The
U.S. National Security Agency in the U.S., and in Mexico, the Interior
Ministry, Defence Ministry and the Attorney General systematically spy on all
electronic communications (Internet, cell phones) in Mexico, and, in fact, the
NSA spies on the whole world, not only to "monitor" what people think
and do, but also to use this information to repress and kill them when they
consider that appropriate to achieve their objectives.
They
disappear and murder people struggling against these injustices in order to
tame and demoralize other activists and many other people who hate all this,
even if they haven't yet dared fight against it. For example, they murdered
Nepomuceno Moreno Nunez (2011), because he protested the disappearance of his
son in Sonora; Marisela Escobedo (2010), because she protested the
disappearance of her daughter and the unjust freeing of the man who murdered
her in Chihuahua; Josefina Reyes Salazar and five other members of her family
(2009-2011) who had denounced the repression by the Army and other crimes in
Juarez; Digna Ochoa (2001), [a human rights lawyer] who brought charges against
the Army and defended the environmentalist peasants of Petatlán, Guerrero (a
murder covered up as a so-called suicide by the Federal District government led
by Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador [the standard-bearer of the allegedly reformist
Party of the Democratic Revolution, PRD] and his prosecutor Bernardo Batiz).
They murdered the National University (UNAM) student activists Pavel Gonzalez
(2004, a murder the Federal District judicial police also called a
"suicide") and Carlos Sinuhe Cuevas Mejia (2011), who had been
previously harassed and threatened by anonymous flyers and the Net. From 2007
through 2011, at least 63 political activists were assassinated in Mexico
according to the UN Human Rights Commission.
To be continued.....
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