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Update over Oaxaca
Carla - 29.12.2006 20:18

Hieronder het eerste stuk van een lang artikel van Nancy Davies op Narconews. Interessant en informatief.

Abductions of Civil Movement Leaders Continue in Oaxaca
Three Men Kidnapped, Beaten and Released While Rueda Pacheco Says Teachers Have Left the APPO; Ulises Ruis Denies Role in Recent Apprehensions

By Nancy Davies
Commentary from Oaxaca

December 21, 2006

Oaxaca, December 19, 2006: The government of Ulises Ruiz Ortiz (URO) categorically denies having anything to do with the abduction of three prominent Popular Assembly of the Peoples of Oaxaca (APPO, in its Spanish initials) men who were intercepted in their car and kidnapped at gunpoint by persons in civilian clothing. According to first reports, the APPO activists were taken to a private home, beaten and tortured and then dumped behind Soriana (a store in the Oaxaca Plaza shopping mall area) after a two hour ordeal. One of the APPO men said he recognized one of their assailants as a police member.

Meer op  http://www.narconews.com/Issue44/article2462.html
 

Read more about: anti-fascisme / racisme globalisering Oaxaca vrijheid, repressie & mensenrechten

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Nog een update 
Carla - 29.12.2006 20:21

Van  http://www.infoshop.org/inews/article.php?story=20061226143455211&query=oaxaca

OAXACA Update from Mexico Solidarity Network

Tuesday, December 26 2006 @ 02:34 PM PST
Contributed by: Anonymous
Views: 354
North AmericaThe following is an update issued by the Mexico Solidarity Network on the latest news from the struggle in oaxaca, Mexico.

After a month and a half occupying the historic center of oaxaca City, the Federal Preventative Police (PFP) removed most of their forces early on Saturday, December 16. Local and state police assumed control of positions abandoned by the PFP. Some PFP troops left oaxaca City, while many retired to less visible positions several blocks from the city center. The same afternoon, federal and state authorities reached an agreement to release 43 political prisoners, many of whom left the federal prison in Nayarit exhibiting signs of torture and wearing clothing drenched in blood. Five days later, another 16 members of APPO walked out of a oaxaca state prison. All of the arrestees were released on bond, which totaled more than 52 million pesos. No one is quite sure who posted the bonds, though speculation is that Governor Ulises Ruiz, under pressure from federal authorities, used state funds to free APPO members. The state Attorney General did not object to any of the releases, an indication of the increasing weakness of Ruiz in the face of unabated protests demanding his removal. This still leaves more than 100 political prisoners associated with the APPO in both state and maximum security federal prisons and dozens of disappeared APPO supporters.



Section 22 of the teachers’ union tried to claim credit for the releases, while also formally breaking with the APPO. Enrique Rueda, head of Section 22, said the APPO “believes that marches are going to resolve their problems, but they’ve had 15 days and they haven’t resolved anything.” The formal leadership of the teachers union, part of the CNTE, has long been at odds with the APPO, though more than a third of the local union membership continues to identify closely with the APPO.

The National Human Rights Commission (CNDH), a government agency, issued a preliminary report on December 18: “conditions in the state and, particularly, in the capitol city, continue in a situation of conflict, and conditions do not exist for the protection and observation of fundamental rights.” The CNDH reported “349 people arrested, 370 injured, and 20 deaths, of which 11 lost their lives in situations directly related to the conflict.” A full report with recommendations in expected in January. Amnesty International called on federal authorities to protect the physical integrity of human rights observers. An Amnesty report called particular attention to Yesica Sanchez from the Mexican League for Defense of Human Rights (Limeddh) and Aline Castellanos from Consortium for Parliamentary Dialogue and Equity, both of whom have arrest warrants pending in apparent retaliation for their human rights activities. The Interior Secretary encouraged APPO members to request temporary restraining orders to prevent further arrests, though this did not thwart the arrests of dozens of people currently in prison, including Flavio Sosa, who were carrying temporary restraining orders when taken into custody. The APPO and the Interior Secretary apparently reached a tentative agreement to prevent more arrests between Christmas and Three Kings day on January 6, though it is unlikely that Governor Ruiz will respect the understanding.

Demonstrations around the world condemned the lawlessness and impunity of the Ruiz administration, and called for his immediate removal.
"Teachers left the APPO" Asamblea+manipulatie 
MM - 30.12.2006 05:57

Kan aleen maar bevestigen wat een leraar mij vertelde:

Er zou sprake zijn van dat een corrupte 'leider' van de APPO de boel overneemt en manipuleert. De leraar die ik ken en lange tijd redelijk meedeed, heeft de APPO recentelijk de rug toegekeerd.

Blijft vreemd, want officieel is APPO een "Asamblea"; dus de mensen beslissen, niet 'leiders', die eigenlijk meer woordvoerders zijn.

Maar zo werkt het dus niet in de praktijk.

Het assamblea systeem word bijvoorbeeld gebruikt bij boeren vergaderingen.
De boeren vertegenwoordiging heeft officieel geen enkele zeggenschap.
Maar ik ben dit jaar opnieuw tegengewerkt voor mijn fruitprojet, terwijl de democratische assamblea al drie keer "ja" heeft gezegd voor mijn project. Eerst zat er die ex-generaal te frustreren:
 http://cxs2.info/w/index.php?title=Carmelo_Teran_Montero
Nu is het zijn adjudant met wat PRI mensen. Eigenlijk is het niet eens PRI, maar hogere belangen en gebruiken ze lagere mensen als motief en om op te hitsen
(daarmee wil ik ook zeggend dat de hele strategie in Oaxaca fout was door de levenswijze van 'moderne' 'kapitalistische' Mexicanen aan te valen, ipv hen er meer in te betrekken).
Dus wat ze doen: vergaderingen midden in de week plannen, terwijl juist veel PRD mensen dan moeten werken. Of mijn punt saboteren door het niet op de agenda te zetten (definitieve contract/clausules). Of veragderingen uit et stellen omdat mijn visa binnenkort afloopt. En ondertussen keer op keer met Migracion te bellen, dat ik nog geen echt project heb, waar dezelde mensen die bellen, de oorzaak van zijn. Ondertussen heeft Migracion de laatse 4 maanden al 4x een onderzoek naar mij ingesteld, voor het laatst op 13 December.
En verder coruptie. De 'adjudant' van de generaal en een ander lid van de beren vertegenwoordiging, zijn PRI en lijken gewoon persoonlijk geld te willen en geven niets om vele toekomsteg miljoenen voor de gemeenschap uit toekomstige winsten van het fruitproject + veel werkgelegenheid. Mijn voormalige 'vriend' Carlos en nu boeren president, praat haast niet meer met de PRD en doet wat deze 'PRI' mensen willen, inclusief hun manipulaties. Ondertussen hebben ze wel binnen een maand een ander project geregeld, dus het riekt naar corruptie.

Zo gaan de zaken in Mexico, ook als het een assamblea betreft.
Dat systeem gaat dus niet ver genoeg; de 'leiders' daarbinnen hebben nog steeds teveel macht om te manipuleren.
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