This is What Recuperation Looks Like: the Rebellion in Oaxaca and the APPO
Wednesday, November 15 2006 @ 12:09 AM PST
Contributed by: Anonymous
Views: 222
(from the forthcoming A Murder of Crows #2)
On May 22, 2006, teachers in the state of Oaxaca, Section 22 of the National Education Worker’s Union (SNTE), went on strike. Section 22 has yearly strikes in Oaxaca to demand a variety of concessions from the state, and this year’s strike included calls for higher wages, the construction of more schools throughout the state of Oaxaca, as well as free lunches and supplies for students. Section 22 members occupied the city center, the Zócalo, to further their protest and disrupt the state capital during the beginning of the tourist season. They set up camping sites in the main square, occupied public buildings and organized large marches, or mega-marches as the Oaxacans call them, to reinforce their economic demands as well as calling for the resignation of Governor Ulises Ruiz. Public support was quite strong for the marches as well as the occupation.
This is What Recuperation Looks Like: the Rebellion in Oaxaca and the APPO
On May 22, 2006, teachers in the state of Oaxaca, Section 22
of the National Education Worker’s Union (SNTE), went on strike. Section 22 has
yearly strikes in Oaxaca to demand a variety of concessions from the state, and
this year’s strike included calls for higher wages, the construction of more
schools throughout the state of Oaxaca, as well as free lunches and supplies for
students. Section 22 members occupied the city center, the Zócalo, to further
their protest and disrupt the state capital during the beginning of the tourist
season. They set up camping sites in the main square, occupied public buildings
and organized large marches, or mega-marches as the Oaxacans call them, to
reinforce their economic demandsas well as calling for the resignation
of Governor Ulises Ruiz. Public support was quite strong for the marches as
well as the occupation.
In early June, teachers were given a final offer and
ultimatum to vacate the Zócalo. On June 14, a police raid authorized by Gov.
Ruiz involving nearly 3,000 officers from the state police attacked the central
square in the early morning hours. A helicopter dropped tear gas into the
square to disorient the occupiers, while outside of the city riot police
readied themselves for an invasion. Police attacked the main square, completely
destroying the teachers’ encampments and injuring hundreds. Teachers and Oaxaca
residents fought back against police aggression and were able to retake the
square in a matter of hours with their fists and makeshift weapons. During the
fighting, however, 8 people died and others were “disappeared.”[1]
After people reoccupied the Zócaloand took control
of surrounding blocks,a mega-march was held on June 16, with an
estimated 400,000 people taking part. This time however, the teachers dropped
their economic demands in exchange for one political demand: the removal of
Gov. Ruiz. Despite the narrowed focus, the struggle was extended in a variety
of ways; teachers occupied seven city hall buildings across the state, and
students at the Benito Juarez Autonomous University of Oaxaca (UABJO) took over
their school radio station in support of the striking teachers.[2]
In addition to these actions, teachers and many on the left formed the Popular
Assembly of the People of Oaxaca (APPO). The APPO
was an ad hoc organization for people to come together to talk about the events
transpiring and to plan future action.
July was contentious as well because the
Mexican presidential elections took place at the beginning of the month. Much
like Ruiz’s election, the presidential election was fraught with allegations of
fraud. Throughout the recount, groups in Oaxaca managed to not be drawn into
any particular party’s machinations.
On August 1, a women’s march involving some 2,000 people
made its way through Oaxaca to the city center. From there a few hundred women
took their protest out of the street and into the building of TV Channel 9.
They occupied the building and took over the station, broadcasting themselves
and their views on the current situation; video footage of the various marches
and police raids was also shown.[3]
By August 22, Ruiz and his cohorts had had enough, and they launched a
paramilitary attack against the station. In response, people took to the
streets, overturning several city buses, setting them on fire, and using them
to block major roads. In addition, demonstrators took over private radio
stations to spread news of the raid and to announce solidarity messages. At the
same time various smaller groups armed with clubs shut down intersections
across the already paralyzed city.[4]
Paramilitary violence has been a serious problem throughout
the teachers’ strike and occupation of the city. The term paramilitaries is
awfully vague, and it has been extremely difficult to find out who has been
behind some of the shootings; those captured are seldom identified by the
state. Certainly the paramilitaries involve Mexican military, Oaxacan police,
as well as the private army of Ruiz who is, at the time of this writing, still
desperately clinging to power. At a march on August 10, gunmen opened fire
killing one teacher, Jose Jimenez.[5]
On October 18, a teacher and APPO participant, Pánfilo
Hernández, was shot and killed in a paramilitary drive-by. On October
27, Brad Will, anarchist and Indymedia journalist, was shot and killed by
paramilitaries, as were Emilio Alonso Fabián and Esteban López Zurita. These
are some of the most well documented cases, but there are dozens of others who
have died in this fight as well.
Events in October were tumultuous, and the month came to a
crashing conclusion. On October 26, Section 22 teachers voted to end their
strike amidst allegations of voting fraud and accusations that their leadership
had sold out. And on October 28, Vicente Fox announced that he was ordering
thousands of Federal Preventative Police (PFP) into Oaxaca in order to retake
the city. When the PFP invasion came, the APPO urged peaceful protest and
non-violent resistance to the police. Lines of riot police equipped with tear
gas and batons pushed back thousands of people, and they also used armored
trucks with water cannons and plows to disperse people and destroy barricades.
The APPO sent out numerous communiqués exhorting people to act peacefully, and
even went so far as to denounce all violent actions against the PFP as the work
of agent provocateurs.[6]
People laid down in the roads, pushed against police lines, but by nightfall
the PFP had made it’s way into the city center.
As police pushed further into the city on November 2, they
attempted to retake the university and destroy the occupied radio station
within it. In a six-hour battle with police, students and many other people
used molotov cocktails, rocks, steel pipes and slings to fight police, and they
overturned cars and buses to further reinforce their blockades. This fierce
resistance forced the police to withdraw, and put a stop to police advances
into the university area. Students and many others were clearly upset about the
loss of the Zócalo to state forces. Therefore they decided to use violent means
to continue occupying the university regardless of what the APPO said. At the
time of this writing, the students and the APPO still control the area
surrounding the university.
Roots of Rebellion
“The rich will do anything for the poor but
get off their backs.” – Karl Marx
The uprising in Oaxaca and the popular mobilizations have
made international headlines recently, but the causes of the situation have not
garnered as much attention. In August 2004, Ulises Ruiz Ortiz, a lawyer, “won”
the Oaxaca governor’s election by a slim margin. Ruiz’s opponents immediately
contested the election results, charging that he and his cohorts had rigged the
outcome. Apparently the opposition’s claims were not unfounded, but Ruiz still
took office in December later that year. Ruiz is a member of the Institutional
Revolutionary Party (PRI) that completely controlled the Mexican federal
government for over 70 years until the 2000 election of Vicente Fox, a National
Action Party (PAN) member, to the presidency. [7]
Considering the extreme poverty in Mexico, with some 40
million living well below the poverty line, it is not surprising that one of
the main ways that the PRI remained in power was through a system of patronage:
contracts, jobs, and funding for education and basic services are handed out after
successful elections of PRI officials on the local and national level. [8]
In thousands of other cases, and specifically in Ruiz’s case, bags of groceries
were handed out in exchange for votes. In Oaxaca though, it was not just Ruiz
who came to power in this way. In the first few months of 2006 there were also
conflicts over town elections in San Blas Atempa, Oaxaca between the Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD) candidate and a PRI
candidate over issues of voter fraud and purchasing of votes. While this may
seem outrageous, patronage has been a normal procedure in politics worldwide
for centuries, and the PRI is just a standard political machine that many
throughout Mexico are finally fed up with. Unfortunately, many people think
that these corrupt politicians should simply be replaced by honest politicians.[9]
The roots of the problem, however, go much deeper than PRI
patronage and corruption that permeate Mexican politics. The cause of the
mobilization and violent clashes with police lies in the absolutely wretched
economic conditions that dominate life across southern Mexico. Oaxaca,
bordering Chiapas to the west, is Mexico’s second-poorest state and has the
second-largest population of indigenous peoples. According to human rights
organizations, nearly 80% of Oaxaca lives in extreme poverty.[10]
The main industry that props up the economy of Oaxaca is tourism. And like all
tourist areas, most people work in services where wages are low, and many
public services are geared towards visitors as opposed to actual residents.
International trade agreements such as the North American Free
Trade Agreement (NAFTA) have only made things worse. The implementation of
neo-liberal reforms to the Mexican state, which has meant an overall cuts to
basic necessities over the past several years, has made it even more difficult
for people to survive.[11]
In recent years, Mexico has been unable to keep pace with China’s offer to the
altar of economic sacrifice: its immense, expendable and therefore cheap work
force. Thus Mexico has been subject to the migration of factories and jobs to
Asia in the same way that the United States has experienced “job loss” to
Mexico. Thus it is not hard to see that dictates of the market care
little about countries, and that capital flows in the direction of greater
profit and greater misery. [12]
It is this complex situation that has led to decades of
social conflict and has culminated in the struggle we see now.
We’re All on the Same Team: the APPO
“Our aim is a more democratic government that listens to the
people more than the current government does.” –APPO Spokesman Florentino Lopez
Martinez
While many inspiring actions are taking place in Oaxaca, one
must not lose the ability to look critically at situations. On the surface the
APPO appears to be simply an assembly of common people charting out their
future, but there are very distinct political perspectives and groups involved.
The membership of the APPO is extremely varied and is composed of a variety of
social organizations, political groupings, unions, and human rights
organizations. Members of Section 22 are involved, as are anarchists, municipal
authorities, and indigenous organizations such as the Movimiento de Unificación y Lucha Triqui (MULT) and the Popular
Indigenous Council of Oaxaca – Ricardo Flores Magon (CIPO-RFM). Within the
APPO, representatives from each group participate in meetings where issues are
decided based on consensus as opposed to majority rule. Members are not
supposed to be involved in parties participating in electoral politics, but
membership is open to groups such as the Revolutionary Popular Front (FPR) and
the Union of Revolutionary Youth of Mexico (UJRM), both of which are openly
appendages of the Marxist-Leninist Mexican Communist Party. One of the spokesmen for the APPO,
Florentino Lopez Martinez, has stated in interviews that he is a member of the
FPR.[13]
Aside from small aspiring states such as the
Marxist-Leninist Mexican Communist Party, there are other politicians in the
midst of the APPO. One of the spokespeople of the APPO, the media-darling and
crass opportunist Flavio Sosa, was a part of Vicente Fox’s
election campaign in 2000 through his organization the New Left of Oaxaca. Sosa
has also been actively involved in the PRI splinter-party the Party of the
Democratic Revolution (PRD) for years, a party he actually quit in order to be
involved in the APPO. [14] It should be pretty obvious that Sosa is a political opportunist
who moves from one group to the next in hopes of carving out some kind of
position for himself. He’s a classic
recuperator, and one in serious need of an ass kicking.
It is also interesting to note that APPO
member and Section 22 leader, Enrique Rueda Pacheco, gave a speech at the fifth
mega-march in Oaxaca in early September calling for “national unity” and a
movement that would incorporate the PRD and the Zapatistas. He has also been
involved in trying to end the teachers’ strike as far back as July. Like a
typical union hack, he consistently tried to undermine the strike in exchange
for political clout. Clearly, the APPO is a mixed bag and includes its
fair share of aspiring politicians and real politicians. This, however, is not
the most damning aspect.[15]
At the end of September, three days of meetings were held to
discuss the transformation of the APPO from an ad hoc organization to a more
formalized and permanent organization in Oaxaca. Following the meetings, a
document entitled “Resolutions of the First State Assembly of the Peoples of
Oaxaca” was released. This document is perhaps the best indication of the
nature of the APPO because it is an attempt to define “…Statutes, the
Declaration of Principles, a definitive Structure and a Program of
Struggle.” Within the resolutions
there is a section entitled “Proposal for a Program of Struggle,” which is most
revealing of the overall aims of the APPO.
The first point of the
program of struggle is entitled “For the Defense of National Sovereignty,” in
which they outline their proposal for withdrawing the Mexican state from trade
agreements such as NAFTA and the FTAA, as well as from organizations such as the
IMF and World Bank. Their second point, entitled “For a New Model of Economic
Development” reaffirms national ownership of natural resources and calls for
the re-nationalization of industries that have been privatized, as well as the
nationalization of monopolistic industries such as banking. Thus the APPO
identifies neo-liberal institutions like the IMF and World Bank and privately
owned corporations as “bad” and the sovereign Mexican state as “good.” A later
portion of the economic program even calls for further economic integration of
Latin America and the Caribbean and the creation of a common market therein, a
sort of alternative FTAA. According to the APPO, the problem is not with the
market, not with capitalism, not with the existence of bureaucratic
institutions, but rather with US imperialism and the bad countries of the North
that take advantage of the good countries in the South. It’s the same tired
charade of national liberation that has proven time and time again to be a
miserable dead end.
The third point of their
program of struggle is “For a Popular Democracy,” in which they proclaim that
the “present antidemocratic State should be replaced with a new State with a
democratic and popular character…” which in turn will be based on “…the will of
the Mexican people to constitute and make effective a Democratic and
Representative Federal Republic.” This points asserts that the state is a
neutral institution and that everything would be better for all of us if only
the corrupt, lying politicians were replaced by honest, democratic politicians.
Perhaps their critique of the state is so liberal because many representatives
in the APPO would like to see themselves as the next ruling elite, but that
remains to be seen. Thus their program of struggle is not proposing the
revolutionary transformation of social life, but rather the democratization of
the state and the continuance of capitalism, albeit with a friendlier face.[16]
Given the participation of many dubious groups and
characters, as well as the “Resolutions of the First State Assembly of the
Peoples of Oaxaca,” we must conclude that the character of the APPO is
reformist, and their overall plan is one of recuperating the rage and
resentment of the dispossessed in order to manage the misery of the current
social order. The APPO does not seek to destroy the state, but it intends to
democratize it. The APPO does not seek to end capitalism, but it intends to
increase state ownership of corporations and make capitalism fairer. Plainly stated, the APPO – an organization
with defined principles and a long term strategy of struggle—does not
share common goals with anarchists, and is certainly taking part in activity
that will actively undermine the overthrow of this system. They promote false
alternatives and question only the management of the state and capitalism, not
the system itself.
Solidarity?
“Prepare to die…Put down your shields and take off your
helmets, and I’ll beat the living shit out of you!” –anonymous Oaxacan woman a
defending the UABJO
This brings us full circle then to the issue of solidarity.
Clearly the APPO is an organization with wide support from those who want to
see major change come about in their lives; this cannot be denied. But their
popularity does not erase the fact that there are micro-bureaucrats actively
involved in the APPO, nor does it change the fact that the APPO’s program is
one of promoting a new way to manage the state and capitalism. Also despite its
name, the APPO does not represent everyone involved, or the revolt in its
entirety. The uprising in Oaxaca has been inspiring because of people’s
willingness to take their lives into their own hands and direct their own
activity. This is the greatest potential of the rebellion: its ability to break
with the normality of being controlled and directed by others and then spread
further, eventually leading to revolutionary social transformation.
People are beginning to rediscover the ability to meet
face-to-face in occupied zones – the Zócalo, the university, the neighborhoods
and streets— in order to discuss matters of real importance. Direct actions
such as strikes, occupations, blockades and sabotage are being employed by all
of those involved. Women are asserting themselves even more, planning actions,
taking over television stations, organizing blockades, and participating in
street fighting against the police. The cessation of “business as usual” and
the casting off of subservience has opened up many possibilities and has led to
massive resistance to the Mexican state. This growing self-organization must
remain truly autonomous if it is not to be slowly ground down by piecemeal
reforms and other political tricks. Therefore the APPO and its alternative
management plan must be rejected.[17]
Despite the deficiencies of the APPO, we should extend
solidarity to the people fighting in Oaxaca. In the United States many
solidarity actions were undertaken during the PFP raids in late October and
early November. Protests were held outside of embassies and consulates in many
cities across the US, including Houston, Phoenix, and Seattle. Consulates in
Sacramento and Minneapolis had their windows smashed, and other consulates and
embassies were blockaded or occupied like in New York, Indianapolis, and
Raleigh. Anarchists in the US have been very active in concretely demonstrating
their solidarity with the events in Oaxaca, and one can only hope that these
actions will spread.
The course of the conflict is being played out as we write.
The Zapatistas have called for a general strike in Mexico on November 20, and
scores of actions are planned in the US and abroad for that day as well.
Consulates and embassies are clearly targets of interest, but one should not
forget that we are fighting an entire system, and that demonstrating solidarity
with Oaxaca can take many forms such as shut downs of corporations with
financial links in Mexico as a whole, blockades in our own cities, and of
course the escalation of activity against more direct issues in the US. People
in Oaxaca are taking steps to combat this system as a whole, let’s do the same.
[1] “Oaxaca
Teachers Union Protests face Police Repression,” available at:
http://www.chiapaspeacehouse.org/node/286, and “Up From Below: The New
Revolution in Southern Mexico,” available at: http://www.counterpunch.org/ross07142006.html
[2]
“In Oaxaca Mega-March,
400,000 Send A Firm No to the Repression by Governor Ulises Ruiz Ortíz,”
available at: http://www.narconews.com/Issue41/article1906.html
[3] “Oaxaca’s
State TV Station Under Popular Control,” available at:
http://www.narconews.com/Issue42/article1990.html
[4] “Mexico
Teachers Extend Protest,” available at:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/5272462.stm
[5] “Vioelence
Flares in South Mexico,” available at:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4782837.stm
[6] For the
APPO’s denunciation of violence, see
http://codepappo.wordpress.com/2006/10/29/urgente-la-pfp-en-oaxaca
[7] “Under the
Volcano,” The Economist, September 28, 2006.
[8] “Oaxaca’s
Dangerous Teachers,” Dollars & Sense: the Magazine of Economic Justice,
September/October 2006.
[9]
“Police Retake Oaxaca Town
Hall Occupied Since January 2005,” available at:
http://www.narconews.com/Issue40/article1654.html
[10] “How Many Deaths Is the Oaxaca Governor
Worth?” available at: http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/1103-08.htm
[11] “Oaxaca’s
Dangerous Teachers,” Dollars & Sense: the Magazine of Economic Justice,
September/October 2006.
[12] For more
information about the economic background of Mexico, see “A Commune in Chiapas?
Mexico and the Zapatista Rebellion,” Aufheben #9, Autumn 2000.
[13] Frente
Popular Revolucionario: http://fprweb.tripod.com/index.htm, and Unión de la
Juventud Revolucionaria de México: http://pagina. de/ujrm. For interview with
Florentino Lopez Martinez see: http://www.infoshop.org/inews/article.php?story=20061022084418717.
[14] “Liderazgo
“camaleónico”: Flavio Sosa, cabeza de la APPO, apoyó al PRD, luego a Fox,”
Diario de la Yucatán, Nov. 6 2006.
[15] “Oaxaca’s
Social Movement Develops Radical Vision for a National Government of the
People” available at: http://www.narconews.com/Issue42/article2038.html.
[16] Resolutions of the First State Assembly of the People's of
Oaxaca are available online at:
http://www.asambleapopulardeoaxaca.com/boletines/index.php?s=RESOLUTIVOS+DE+LA+PRIMERA+ASAMBLEA+ESTATAL+DE+LOS+PUEBLOS +DE+OAXACA+
[17] For a
look at one neighborhood’s activities which are outside of the APPO, see “Two
Days in the Life of Oaxaca's Revolution,” available at:
http://narconews.com/Issue42/article2021.html