Second of Two
Parts
August
21, 2002
Narco News '02
How
the Victory at
Atenco
Was Won
The
Death of the Texcoco Airport
...and
the Struggle Goes On and On
By Maria
Botey Pascual
Special
to the Narco News Bulletin
With
Historic Photos of Insurgent Mexico
By Tina
Modotti
Part
II
Atenco:
From Local Battle to
National and Global Cause
Click
Here if You Missed Part I
Questioned
and booed for his treason on October
22, 2001, the mayor of San Salvador Atenco, instead of offering
explanations for his silence - presumed by an angry public to
have been bought - he and his municipal officials (including
the police) ran from the town. Meanwhile, the Town Hall was taken
over by the people. They closed it, later taking over the auditorium
for the movement's use, which they poetically called the Sanctuary
of Resistance. Later, other towns affected disowned their communal
land commissioners and their mayors for not having been on the
side of the people, and substituted them with their own people.
As owners of the land, the ejidatarios
(communal farmers) - many of whom were also active in the direct
action part of the movement - met in assemblies and decided to
promote a legal battle for a court injunction against the International
Airport project. Their lawsuits were complimented by the constitutional
challenges to the Texcoco airport offered by the government of
Mexico City and those of Texcoco, Acolman and Atenco. Each alleged
the violation of various constitutional articles governing municipal
autonomy, property seizures, misuse of public funds, environmental
damage, community planning and human displacement.
Of course, not all the neighbors within
the affected towns agreed with the marches and blockades, but
while some hoped for a court resolution, the resistance and popular
power movement was growing in leaps and bounds, given the distrust
of the fairness of Justice in the country and the continuous
violations of the law by the state and federal governments (the
demonstrators were violently put-down on various occasions, and
the neighbors found people working on the seized properties in
spite of the existence of court orders prohibiting any work on
the project until legal resolution of the lawsuits. This led
the people to place the construction workers into custody and
display them to the public, along with their "confiscated"
vehicles which were used, as theater, in their marches.)
The development of the resistance was
not easy, commented one of the leaders: "We had to work
with the people to demonstrate to them, with unity and strength,
that it is possible to confront the unjust decisions by authorities
successfully. We had to confront divisions created by the government
among the people. Up to the final hour the government was making
payments and gifts to neighbors in exchange for a favorable attitude
about the airport (a pair of cans of paint, bags of cement, some
pesos), explaining the importance of not accepting these gifts
or at least to do so without changing one's attitude about the
airport. We also had to learn to concentrate on the real enemy,
leaving existing tensions between neighbors to the side for later."
And the attempted bribes to change opinion were gigantic. As
another leader said, "If they offered me, as a delegate
of the movement, a bribe of two million pesos (about $200,000
U.S. dollars) and a house, what amount did they offer the ejido
commissioners or the mayors?"
Many of the neighbors recognized that
in the nine months before the issuance of the decree they had
to create a school of resistance and struggle, where they had
learned principally to overcome their fear of the repressive
police forces (some would say goodbye to their families before
going out to march, knowing they could lose their lives) and
of the dirty tactics of the government. They had learned to organize,
to maintain unity and to establish links with other resistance
groups in the country; to cultivate public speaking skills. The
women took time to do all this, in many cases, with the opposition
of their husbands and gossipy neighbors. The people who had never
participated in the ejido commissions or any social organization
awakened their own sleeping consciences. Above all, they learned
that, faced with an injust action by the government and a state
of law that has been imposed and strategically designed to keep
the public submissive and in the dark that they could rebel and
in fact they had to if they wanted to keep their dignity. As
one communal farmer said, "Maybe if the government had not
come to bother us directly, we would have remained as we were
for so long, maybe fooled, maybe dedicated to our work without
looking up, but they've already attacked us. We confronted them
and now we are in the fight."
From
the beginning they understood that
publicizing their problem and the reasons for their resistance
to indifferent neighbors or those who were favorable to the Airport
project, as web as to the rest of the country. That's why, as
the People's Front for the Defense of the Land, as they quickly
titled their movement (before that it was named the United Front
Against the Airport), made certain to attend all the forums to
which they were invited and participated with other civil organizations
in their own protest marches, creating a national network of
solidarity that ensured their success.
In the same spirit, many national groups
with experience in resistance and confronting injustice came
to Atenco. They supported the locals morally and materially and
shared their strategies of struggle and their histories. One
Atenco resident recalls the visit by the people of Tepoztlán,
Morelos (another local fight that nationalized with the "We
Are All tEpoZtLáN" slogan authored by EZLN spokesman
Subcomandante Marcos in 1995), "who came in three buses
at the very beginning of the fight and spoke about the dangers
of repression, the possible deaths of compañeros and the
dirty play of the government, recommending above all that we
maintain our unity. In them, we saw their heroism and an example
of how to beat the system, even under difficult circumstances.
From the Francisco Villa Popular Front (one of the national organizations
that local leaders say, along with the General Strike Committee
of the national university, had an approach to organizing similar
to their own) we learned the power of demonstrations as a pressure
to make sure we are heard. From the National Teachers Union,
we learned their discipline and coordination in the marches,
the impeccability of their encampments and, once again, that
unity was fundamental to our survival. From the Rural High Schools
network (in Mexe, Hidalgo, in Amilcingo, Morelos and in Tenería
in the State of México), we saw their guts, their combative
and decisive style. From the General Strike Committee (CGH, in
its Spanish initials) of the national university, we learned
that public forums are very important to make the struggles known
and unify them (citizens of Atenco also had gone to Monterey
to protest the international economic summit there). From the
Electric Workers Union, and those at the Euzkadi, Ford and Fertinal
factories, we learned that the fight is not just of the farmers
but included the three vectors of popular organization: farmers,
workers, and students. We also had meetings more political organizations
such as the Revolutionary Popular Front and the Independent Popular
Movement, or with university students and teachers such as the
unions of professors and workers at nearby Chapingo University
- as well as the post-graduate students - from whom we received
unconditional support and a space to conduct the dialogue (that
had not been offered prior to the discovery of the secret decree
authorizing the land-takings for the Airport in the National
Archives), and from them we learned the word "inclusive,"
that we should not disparage any form of struggle to achieve
the demands of the people. Of course, the National Zapatista
Liberation Front (FZLN) came and spoke to us about the low-intensity
warfare that could fall upon us and they shared their pain as
our brothers and sisters. From them we learned that every struggle
of peasant farmers is a Zapatista struggle, because it is a fight
for land and identity and dignity."
Of course, international organizations
that work in México also arrived, as did individual people
from foreign lands who came to understand the struggle and offer
support. That fact was used by the system to criminalize the
struggle, accusing it of being manipulated by outside agitators
(an argument they had to contend with from the beginning after
accusations by their own mayor) because Power doesn't like solidarity
to be globalized. And they asked: Are only politicians and businessmen
allowed to have outside advice? Isn't the government of Vicente
Fox a clear example of foreign manipulation, including monetary?
The People's Front in Defense of the Land
organized huge demonstrations that, for parts of the struggle,
were held daily. Important marches were held on November 14,
2001, and caused an international stir due to the beatings that
dozens of men, women and children received from the police as
they entered Mexico City. In spite of that, more than a thousand
farmers arrived at the Zócalo (Mexico City's huge public
square), with machetes in hand, where thousands of members of
civil organizations that supported them awaited, while those
who had remained in the towns affected by the airport went out,
indignantly, to block the highway in protest of the police aggressions
and to ask for the liberation of those arrested, who were freed
some hours later.
Six days later they held a local march
from Ixtapan to the state attorney general's office in Texcoco,
in defiance of the police attacks that were already occurring
against their towns. There was also the constant psychological
pressure of low-flying surveillance helicopters over their lands.
Coinciding with the anniversary of the Mexican Revolution - "which
continues because the abuses by power and injustice continue"
- they demanded the cancellation of arrest warrants against some
of those opposed to the airport, as well as revocation of the
land-taking decree. It was in those days that the Indigenous
National Congress joined the fight of the original peoples of
the lands of the Texcoco region and participated with them over
a period of many months.
On November 28, 2001, they walked from
the statue of the Angel of Independence in México City
to the Zocalo against the decree and the repression, receiving
the solidarity of the passers-by. Already, many more Mexicans
understood the justness of their cause, in spite of the manipulations
by the media. In early December they joined the grand march of
the teachers union to the National Congress, in rejection of
the economic policy, fiscal reform, education policies and the
construction of the new airport.
Days
later, the tension grew with some anonymous
calls that alerted the townspeople to the possible entrance by
the Army into the expropriated zone on January First, while Fox
insisted that the Airport decision had already been made in a
responsible manner and that it would be built (later it would
be seen, much more clearly, that the necessary studies had not
been made but that there had been many pressures by economic
interests to locate the airport in the State of Mexico). Communal
farmers and neighbors constructed more fences and barricades
in the towns to impede the entrance of "outside interests,"
police forces or construction equipment. Atenco declared itself
a "municipality in rebellion" and disowned the town,
state and federal authorities "because they don't represent
the interests of the people." And they established a "maximum
alert" awaiting the beginning of construction last January.
But the Army never entered and on January
23rd, more than 2,500 farmers marched to Toluca (the state capital)
trying, again, to discuss the issue with the governor. There,
they were welcomed by thousands of students and sympathizers
with their cause, but also by 11,000 police officers. They were
not beaten but neither did they obtain a meeting with Governor
Arturo Montiel. They did, though, receive new threats from the
state attorney general to prosecute those who would not conform
with the airport plans.
On February 5th they accompanied the unionized
workers at the Euzkadi and Ford factories in their protest over
layoffs and from there the frequency of the marches, together
with different social organizations throughout the country in
favor of social justice (the solidarity network spread like wildfire),
while their participation in public forums and meetings with
other communities harmed by the seizures that are part of Plan
Puebla Panamá also increased. A colorful march was held
in April on the anniversary of the assassination of Emilano Zapata,
the grand fighter of the Revolution "who, yes, is behind
this movement" they said when they were accused of being
led by outside agitators.
What began as seeking a solution face
to face (but never obtained) with state Governor Arturo Montiel,
ended in the cancellation of the airport project in Texcoco but
not of the struggle itself. As many said after the cancellation,
"the struggle goes on and on," and now the solidarity
network is strengthened and conscience has grown.
In early July, after almost nine months
of conflict, the non-conforming affected peoples had already
been pressured psychologically, beaten, threatened with prison
and death, and disqualified many times by the government: Their
participants ("who are against progress"), their struggle
("manipulated and criminal"), their lands ("that
were unproductive"), their people ("uneducated")
and their traditions ("that don't exist"). They had
also been infiltrated, approached with bribe offers and attempts
to divide and confuse them. For example, rumors were spread that
the members of the Front had received money and were going to
abandon the town as soon as things got difficult.
On the road to the town of Teotihuacan,
where the governor of the state was found one day, the government
tried to deliver a knockout punch: Arresting the leaders and
ending the movement with a treasonous ambush - with police jumping
out of cornfields and infiltrations by those police forces among
the demonstrators - during which the forces of repression acted
brutally and violent (and with real lead bullets, in addition
to the teargas) against a relatively small group of demonstrators.
They arrested more than a dozen communal farmers accusing them
of robbery against the government, rioting, attacks on the roads
and highways, violence, vandalism and kidnapping in a conflict
that left eight people hospitalized and others wounded.
But if the movement had seemed tired after
months of struggle, the affected peoples rapidly demonstrated
that they were united as never before. Thousands of neighbors
angrily blockaded roads and highways, they burned vehicles, they
took over soft-drink trucks (the contents were used during those
days as part of the Popular Kitchen that fed all the invitees),
they rioted with whatever they could find or make (including
some improvised Molotov cocktails). Then, in the offices of the
state attorney general, they took various police officers and
workers hostage with the goal of trading them for the compañeros
who had been arrested. By night they dug more trenches and intensified
the vigilance throughout the region due to a threat of invasion
by the Federal Preventive Police (PFP, in its Spanish initials,
who in fact had cordoned off the entire region together with
the Armed Forces), while various social organizations throughout
the country began caravans toward Atenco and threatened to shut
down the highways in their own respective states.
These were days of great tension that dominated the pages of
the press and the TV news, national and international, while
México awaited the next visit of the Pope and his mediatic
wave, adding yet another note of suspense to the matter and the
risk that the conflict would extend to the papal visit. On one
side, there were declarations of solidarity from throughout the
nation. On the other, the call to apply an iron fist to the "rebels."
There was a fierce debate over which side was responsible for
the collapse of the rule of law (that, in fact, had been broken
from the beginning when the affected peoples were denied information
about the plans for their land and the violation of municipal
authority over land use, in a country where, in every way, the
application of justice depends on too many occasions on who has
the economic resources or influence, and where the powerful engage
in every kind of dirty play to obtain what they want). And the
continued determination of the communal farmers to refuse to
sell their lands, although "curiously" the offered
price-per-meter was raised and better compensation was offered
in the form of housing, jobs and education. But none of that
succeeded in convincing the farmers to sell the land and to cease
the demand for cancellation of the eminent domain decree, while
they continued to seek a direct dialogue with the federal government.
In spite of the fact that by Friday, July
12th, the President of the Nation continued to state publicly
that the Airport plan would not be detained but that he was ready
to dialogue, the project began to tumble three days later with
some curious statements to CNN. That's when, at the last minute,
the press office of the President of the Republic placed a condition
on reporters that nobody ask Vicente Fox about Atenco, but Fox
tripped on his own words and ended up saying that there were
other alternative places to construct the airport and that nobody's
rights would be violated (he was later corrected by his own Interior
Minister Santiago Creel, and "in private," Fox himself
ended up saying that he did not know of any other options).
But if there was still any possibility
in favor of the greedy businessmen and government, which continued
in these days claiming that it had negotiated the airport deal
with various local representatives - and this enraged the inhabitants
of the region even more, who declared that any such individuals
did not represent the people and that this was another dirty
move by the authorities - the situation became more difficult
still. One of the protesters, beaten and arrested, had died.
He had been the last one still in the hospital and he slipped
into a coma. But not only that, the State Government also tried
by all means and with tremendous cynicism to falsely convince
the public that the deceased did not even have any land at stake
(it was in the name of his wife), and that he had been forced
to participate in the movement against his will and he died because
he did not tell the hospital that he had diabetes. They said
that his diabetes killed him, in spite of the fact that the doctors
had declared that he had suffered a cranial fracture as the cause
of death.
This death coincided with the first and
only meeting between the townspeople and the federal government,
that after various fits and starts occurred in the National Archives
on July 24th and not in the Chapingo University campus near Atenco
as the farmers had wanted. At this meeting, the director of development
for the new airport and negotiator for the federal authorities,
Curi Pérez Fernández, had to listen to the anger
expressed by the farmers over the death of their compañero.
They characterized it as an assassination by the government and
once again stated their absolute opposition to the airport, while
protestors chanted outside the building: "Enrique Espinoza,
Your Death Was Not In Vain." They also chanted, as they
had for months, "The Land Grows Beans, not Hotels or Planes,"
and "Zapata Lives, the Fight Continues," and the internationally-known
"When the People Rise Up, for Bread, Freedom and Land, the
Powerful Tremble from the Coast to the Mountain!" Responding
to the wide popular support for the justness of their cause throughout
the country - in spite of the the blockades and hostages taken
by the movement, in spite of the insistence by the state attorney
general that outside agitators and even foreign terrorist groups
had "sought to create a martyr" - and at the risk that,
everybody knew by then, the conflict was on the verge of spilling
over nationwide.
The death and burial of one of their compañeros
(on seized lands, because with the airport they would even lose
their dead) unified the opponents and other affected towns even
more, including sectors that until then had remained apart from
the movement. They met at the People's Front for Defense of the
Land in the First National Peasant Farmers Gathering in San Salvador
Atenco, and counted with the presence of more than 100 civil
organizations of the country including delegates from Central
America. When all was added up, it remained clear that the Texcoco
Airport could only be built by imprisoning and over the dead
bodies of the people of the region, since the farmers had remained
firm in their determination to fight unto the death if necessary.
While some sectors of the media reported
on the problems of soil and climate inherent in an airport in
the Texcoco area, pointing to better conditions existing in another
site (Tizayuca, in the state of Hidalgo) - the economic interests
thus confirmed that the Texcoco site was not as optimal as they
had portrayed it to be - or proposing other possibilities, the
government and the entire country was riveted, at the end of
July, in the visit (a giant media show that also created other
controversies) of the maximum authority of the Catholic Church,
to whom the farmers of Atenco sent a letter the summed up the
conflict in their words. It said:
"...In the entire world very profound
changes attack human dignity. Under false pretenses our governments
tell us of well-being and progress for our peoples that in reality
are just words that paint over the extreme poverty that they
are forcing upon us. And when we raise our voices to denounce
the injustices, we get indifference and repression by the State,
for the sole reason that we defend our rights and our dignity
"
"
The eminent domain decree
is illegal and illegitimate, because we were never informed nor
consulted. The authorities have treated us and our land as merchandise,
forgetting that we have identity, history, culture and traditions
that are not for sale nor subject to the interests of a few mercenaries
"
"
The People's Front in the
Defense of the Land asks you to investigate our situation and
declare yourself in favor of our cause, which is right and just,
because our believes are as sacred as our lands and our lands
are our lives."
Although the dilemma that the resistance
movement had caused the federal government had nothing to do
with the Pope's visit, it was during the few hours of His visit
that President Vicente Fox announced the cancellation of the
Texcoco Airport Project. The announcement took the opponents
by surprise, ready as they had been during months of conflict,
to fight. And it provoked shameful declarations by those who
had economic interests in the project, such as the Bishop of
Ecatepec, who said that whether it took one death or hundreds,
the airport should have been built.
Their
rebellion against authority, based on the rightness of their
cause, brought them a triumph that
they won for themselves. With intelligence and integrity they
took to the streets, they knew how to convince the nation of
the reasons for their fight and demonstrated that the abuses
of those who believe that they can dominate the world to their
tastes and for their particular interests with money and prepotency
can be defeated with dignity. And this has given courage to other
communities that suffer similar problems.
But beyond experiencing the force of unity
and practicing People Power, and of making decisions in public
assembly, they demanded more than ever before that their true
representatives must be on the side of the people. They realized,
for example, that by kicking the police out of town and organizing
their own self-vigilance for the town that public safety increased,
as crime and drug addiction decreased, according to their own
observations. The extraordinary positive experience, and the
disappointment in all the political parties "who during
this struggle only came near us to forward their own interests"
has now led Atenco to declare itself an Autonomous Municipality
(in the style of the Zapatistas of Chiapas). They are ready to
negotiate the creation of a Town Council - a formula that Mexican
Law provides for in cases of political collapse - when and only
when they are permitted to choose its members. Although the mayor
has recently tried to return, the townspeople have rejected him:
They continue to ban him from Town Hall.
The farmers have stressed more than once,
and now more than ever, that, yes, they want progress, but a
progress that corresponds to the necessities of each community
as expressed by its own population. With this challenge they
have already held the first work meeting with the academics of
Chapingo University, for the elaboration of a development plan
for the region that includes agricultural stimulation, water
treatment, the creation of new educational centers, promotion
of artisan crafts, commercial modernization, public services
and industry, as well as a plan for protection and conservation
of natural areas, and their rights that these demands be attended
to by the corresponding authorities.
The chant is now "Atenco Lives, the
Fight Continues," and "The Voice of the Machetes Could
Do More than the Dollars." On August 14th, the farmers of
the Texcoco area demonstrated, once again, the national capital,
accompanied by dozens of civil organizations and with machetes
in hand, to demand that the federal government cancel the prosecutions
of all the opponents, especially a dozen farmers, the cancellation
of arrest warrants against various members of the People's Front
in Defense of the Land and damages to be paid to the family of
the fallen comrade who had been beaten by the police.
It's that in Atenco, they are conscious
that if the federal government changed its mind regarding the
airport, it happened because it wanted to toss the hot potato
that was at the point of provoking a national extension of the
conflict. But that the attacks by the selfish national and international
businessmen, protected by the government, could come again in
a more subtle manner if the people let down their guard. The
farmers continue standing on their feet in struggle to support
"all the just causes that defend the dignity of the people
and of México." Concretely, they are preparing to
combat the Plan Puebla Panamá, which is already affecting
communities in various regions of the country. And for this they
already count with a national network of civil organizations
stronger and more vigorous than before.
Maria Botey Pascual
is the author of "A la recerca d'El Quemado" ("In
Search of Burnt Mountain") (2002, Columna Press, Barcelona),
is a correspondent for the Mexican daily Por Esto!, and participant
in the journalistic coverage by Narco News of the 2001 Zapatista
Caravan. She reported this series from San Salvador Atenco.
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Enrique
Espinoza, Your Death Was Not In Vain