Mexico City
María Luisa Tomasini, 78, a Chiapas native designated by Marcos as the "grandmother of all the Zapatistas," analyzed his call to the other insurgent groupsas she was returning from the March 7 Zapatista rally in Iguala, Guerrero, a state with at least sixteen armed clandestine guerrilla organizations. "Clearly," she said, "it was a threat to the government that it had better comply."
This article is part of the Haywood Burns Community Activist Journalism series, sponsored by the New World Foundation and the Nation Institute.
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Never Shut Up, New York
Al Giordano: NYC's historic refusal to shut up is one of the national treasures that some newly minted sunshine patriots wish to bulldoze under the rubble of Lower Manhattan.
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Zapatistas on the March
Al Giordano: Many compared it to marching through a dream.
On March 19 the Zapatistas announced they will return to the jungle, citing the "close minded" attitude of "cavemen politicians," saying, "Nothing will be able to stop the popular mobilization" that stems from the Congress's failure to act. "We will return with everyone who we are." Immediately, thirteen national peasant-farmer groups pledged nationwide marches, students plotted direct action and five major indigenous groups in Oaxaca vowed to close the Pan American Highway until Congress passes the accords. Congressional leaders begged the Zapatistas to stay, Fox urged the Congress to meet with the rebels and the drama now moves in unpredictable directions.
The guiding principle of the San Andrés Accords is autonomy. The word has galvanized many beyond Mexico's indigenous populations. The battered Mexican left--peasant farmers, urban workers and especially the nation's youth--view themselves, too, under the banner of autonomy. Indeed, the popularity of the Zapatista struggle around the world derives at least in part from the coherent language of opposition to globalized and savage capitalism that they have constructed. French sociologist Alain Torraine, who accompanied the caravan, praised the Zapatistas during a March 12 discussion with Marcos and the comandantes in Mexico City, marveling, "The entire world, and we are speaking of the left, is looking for a new language." Comandante David, a Tzotzil delegate who was a chief negotiator and architect of the San Andrés Accords, acknowledges that the demand for autonomy goes far beyond indigenous rights. "We are going to explain directly to the indigenous and nonindigenous brothers of the country that indigenous rights are for the good of all the peoples," he said while preparing to leave on the caravan.
Autonomy--what might be called "home rule" in other parts of the world--includes local control of land use, a sore point for big business in Mexico, its eyes on natural resources.
Beyond Mexico, US investors and corporate interests, with expectations that Fox will be the most effective deliveryman yet of Mexican resources under NAFTA, are stoking the subterfuge. Former US Ambassador to Mexico James Jones, now a railroad baron and rainmaker for the Manat, Phelps and Phillips law and lobbying firm in Washington, is on the board of directors of TV Azteca, the most notorious manipulator of public opinion among all the Mexican media. TV Azteca joined the other broadcasting giant, Televisa, to present a March 3 Concert for Peace live from Aztec Stadium, featuring a laser light show, a Woodstock-style logo and the usual condescension toward "our indigenous brothers." The prepackaged video aired with the concert didn't mention autonomy, or indigenous political prisoners, or 500 years of conquest--certainly not justice in connection with the 1997 massacre of unarmed indigenous peasants at Acteal. The only proposed solution was to send aid to the poor, barefoot indigenous communities, an approach known in Mexican politics as "clientism." Many analysts saw Fox's fingerprints on the TV peace show, as both stations rely on state permission to broadcast in Mexico. Indeed, one of the demands of the San Andrés Accords is the right of indigenous peoples to break that control by forming their own media, including the use of radio and television frequencies.
The question of indigenous autonomy also has consequences for the US-imposed "war on drugs." The San Andrés Accords would restore indigenous rights to the use of currently illicit sacred plants and codify the pre-eminence of ancient forms of community justice. Luciano, a spokesman for the Zapatista community of Polho, explained to me in 1998 how the autonomous system works without constructing a single prison cell: "If a young man grows marijuana, he goes before a municipal judge to be disciplined and oriented so that he won't ever do it again. If the youth does it again, there is no response whatsoever: He cannot be pardoned a second time. He would then be expelled from the community."
That the Zapatista communities have had far more success in driving out the narcotraffickers and preventing drug and alcohol abuse than any other region of the Americas is of little concern to the big talkers of law and order. Opponents charge that autonomy in matters of criminal justice would "balkanize" the country and subvert the "rule of law."
Indigenous and social movements across Latin America--in Ecuador, Colombia, Bolivia, Peru, Panama, Brazil and other nations--had representatives quietly observing the caravan. In spite of the powers stacked against them, the Zapatistas, newly strengthened, their national support deepened, have many cards yet to play in forcing legislative victory. In the latest of the ironies under NAFTA, autonomy may thus, and soon, become Mexico's leading export product.
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