March
3, 2001
Narco News 2001
Beyond
Spectacle
Zapatista Caravan
Marches
Through All América
March 3rd Editorial by the daily
La Nación of Costa Rica
Publisher's Note: Narco News translates and publishes
today's editorial from the daily La Nación of Costa Rica,
not because we agree with all of its opinions - we don't - but
because a publication with different viewpoints agrees on the
essential point: The Zapatista Caravan is important to all América.
Beyond Spectacle
The
Zapatista Army Marches through all América
A
week ago, "the march for indigenous
dignity" began, from its headquarters in La Realidad, in
Chiapas, led by the enigmatic subcomandante Marcos, 23 unarmed
comandantes and their faces covered with ski masks, as well as
indigenous groups, all of which form the Zapatista Army of National
Liberation (EZLN). In a week, after 3,000 kilometers and the
celebration of 33 acts or special stops, the caravan will arrive
in Mexico City.
This long March, reminiscent of Mao -
although different in that the many comandantes don't sleep in
trucks but, rather, travel in a tourist bus equipped with television,
air conditioning and bathroom - complies with one of the first
promises by the EZLN: "Advance to the capital." On
this occasion the proposal is not to defeat the government, as
it announced on January 1, 1994, but, according to what its leaders
have proclaimed in recent days, a dialogue for peace in Chiapas
and the constitutional recognition of indigenous rights. As the
caravan advances, criticism of the government of President Fox
intensifies, sometimes with archaic rhetoric, but thunderous
and, it seems, effective in many countries of the Third World.
And the number of spectators grows each day as if this were a
bicycle race.
Subcomandante Marcos becomes today a national
hero for diverse sectors of Mexico, culminating seven years of
intense and continuous propaganda. Without a doubt, he is the
consummate teacher. His role, in political, social, economic
and social ideals since 1994, has discovered an unending mother
lode, sustained and made even larger by the the advantage of
irresponsibility that people of these kinds of movements have.
This march and, in general, the actions
of the EZLN are a direct matter for Mexico. But its strategy,
methodology and results, positive or negative, cannot be disassociated
from the reality of our countries because of the discourse it
brings, its geographic proximity and its resonance, political
and military, with similar movements in Latin America in recent
years.
For President Fox, it constitutes an enormous
challenge at the dawn of his government, one that could determine,
for good or for bad, his political future. But it is also for
the Mexican people. The political leaders must understand that.
From this perspective, the Colombian example, near and painful,
represents the best laboratory. If the Mexican state cedes its
most basic essence in the principles of sovereignty, legitimacy
and government, the consequence is well known. The principal
danger lies in not being able to distinguish, from the conceptual
and practical points of view, between the justice of the indigenous
demands, which must be satisfied, and the certain fact that an
internal rebellion - like the alliance between drug trafficking
and Colombian guerrillas - will always want and demand more.
We cannot remain indifferent toward the
internal situation of Mexico, above all if we look toward the
south at the crisis in Colombia, Venezuela or Ecuador, whose
triggers have been, in this order, drug trafficking, guerrillas
and paramilitaries; the populism of a Marxist shade by President
Chávez and the chaos of Ecuador aggravated by the growing
opposition by indigenous groups. The common denominator of these
complex situations has been the accumulation of economic and
social problems, the political incapacity to react quickly with
seriousness and effectiveness, a certain slumber and even complicity,
in many cases, by Civil Society, reflected in the spineless city
cultures. The political vacuum and governmental ineptness lead,
in some cases, to rebellion, in others to messianic populism:
in both cases to the fracture of the system. If these premises
are joined, there is no democratic country that will be immune
to the results. This is a time to observe and to learn.
Bolívar
Rides in México