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Low Intensity War in Loxicha
By K. Ramirez and A. Frumin
With such a compelling cast of characters and enough plot twists for a Hollywood screenplay, it seems unfathomable that the world has not yet been alerted to the story of the Zapotec people. In the Loxicha Region, nestled between Oaxaca City, the touristed colonial capital of the state of Oaxaca, and the tranquil fishing ports and beaches of the Pacific, are a people living in terror. Illegitimately linked to the 1996 guerrilla movement of the EPR (Ejército Popular Revolucionario), these native Zapotec have for nearly two years suffered systematic repression and marginalization at the hands of the Mexican government, federal and state police forces, army, large landowners, and narcotraffickers. Still more disturbing are accounts of American Federal Bureau of Investigation involvement. This paper sets out to document the countless human rights abuses encountered in this otherwise unknown region in the hope that national and international attention might challenge the impunity, repression, and militarization that is now a daily reality in southern Oaxaca.
The Colorful Zapotec People and the Antecedents of the
Conflict
In the fertile mountains of the Southern Sierra, in the region known as Loxicha, live a population of 35,000 Zapotec. It is estimated that the Zapotec have been settled in this region for six thousand years, since the introduction of agriculture, and thus comprise one of the oldest civilizations in the world. This warrior civilization was among the only groups not conquered by the aggressive Aztecs (Riding 1985: 291-292). Among the most well-known monuments to the accomplishments of the Zapotec civilization is the awe-inspiring pre-Columbian site of Monte Alban.
The geographic area occupied by the contemporary Zapotec consists of thirty-two rural communities within the district of Pochutla. The political authority of Loxicha is centered in San Agustín. The predominant language and race is Zapotec. There are four groups of Zapotec found throughout Oaxaca. Each group speaks a dialect of Zapotec so distinct from the others that members of different groups often cannot understand each other.
The living conditions of the Zapotec fall far below the already low standards found throughout Mexico. Eighty percent of the population is illiterate. The makeshift homes of the Zapotec are constructed of wood, corrugated tin roofs, and earthen floors. In terms of infrastructure, a mere seven communities have electricity. In addition, the dirt roads allowing access to many of the outlying communities become impassable during the rainy season. Within the Loxicha region, the nearest village to San Agustín is one-and-a-half hours walking, while the furthest away takes up to twelve hours in transit (La Unión 1996). The only paved road through the region extends from Oaxaca City to Pochutla.
These transportation problems have serious health implications. Many of the communities lie eight to twelve hours from San Agustín, where the region's one clinic has six beds attended to by one doctor and one nurse. Thus it comes as no surprise that a high mortality rate exists in the rural areas of Loxicha (La Unión 1998: 2). Due to a lack of potable water and the inaccessibility of medical care, even curable ailments like diarrhea, malnutrition, advanced flu viruses, and anemia have proven to be deadly.
The Zapotec are also no stranger to the tribulations brought by mother nature. Although Acapulco enjoyed most of the international press when hurricanes Paulina and Rick tore through southern Mexico in October, 1997, the Loxicha region was even more hard-hit. The larger of the two hurricanes, Paulina, destroyed hundreds of houses and thousands of hectares of corn, beans, coffee, and forest (Velez Ascencio, 11/7/97). The Zapotec also endure frequent earthquakes as a major fault line runs directly though the district of Pochutla.
Corn and coffee make up the agricultural foundation of the Loxicha economy. While corn, beans, and lima beans are used mainly for subsistence, coffee obtains wide profits for the caciques who sell to the market. Subsistence farming takes place on communal land known as the tequio, which is farmed by the entire community. The Zapotec's narrow economy, based on so few products, has inevitably obliged many to emigrate to larger cities in search of opportunity.
Politically, the region is broken down into municipalities. The
municipal election system is known popularly as "usos y
custumbres," involves the convening of popular assemblies headed by a council of respected community members. Authorities are named during popular assemblies in January, and term lengths are decided upon at the time of election. Public authorities are not paid. Additionally, the popular assemblies safeguard the peace and harmony of the municipality and protect the right to dismiss delinquents (Rubio Cabrera,).
Although article four of the Mexican Constitution grants indigenous communities the right to govern themselves autonomously within their region, the recent influx of political parties has effectively transformed the system. Officially and historically, the region of Loxicha has been dominated by the PRI, or Partido Revolucionario Institutional, which has ruled Mexico for the last 68 years. The PRI candidates visit the communities near election time, handing out small favors and promises in exchange for votes. When the candidate is brought to power through the popular assemblies all promises are conveniently disregarded.
The PRI domination of the region is inextricably linked to the Loxicha cacique class. This story has been told time and again. In 1954, the municipal agency granted a group of families commercial space. The families grew quite wealthy and assumed the concomitant power. Similar to the indentured servitude found in the United States after the Civil War, the caciques oblige the campesinos to grow coffee on the vast quantities of land. The caciques then take the coffee to market, where they make large profits. They control these profits, for they are among the few who have transportation to make the long journey. Those who farm the coffee, the Zapotec, receive a minimal amount of the profit. For three kilos of unprocessed coffee beans they receive six to twelve pesos (La Unión 1998: 4). To ensure the return of labor the following year, the caciques also withhold pay from those who have traveled long distances to work. Often children accompany their parents on the arduous five- to six-hour walk and additional hour-long bus ride to the harvest. Therefore, schools are left nearly empty during the coffee harvest season, from December to March. The Zapotec's compensation is not enough to break out of their cycle of economic dependence. Thus, they remain bound to land they do not own.
The cacique families have enjoyed impunity through their alliance with the PRI government. According to jailed municipal agent and municipal president testimonies, the cacique families tortured, raped, killed, and expelled members of the community. However, in 1978, to protect public safety under the mandate of "usos and custumbres," the caciques were held responsible for their wrongdoings, and the people of Loxicha forced many of them out. Although the cacique families made several attempts to reenter the region, the Zapotec would not allow their return (Human Rights Observation Brigade in the Loxicha Region 1997: 1).
After the expulsion, the caciques' armed guards, or pistoleros, changed roles only nominally to become the paramilitaries of the PRI government. One of these paramilitary groups is the Antorcha Campesina. This reactionary peasant organization functions to divide opposition efforts through paramilitary violence. Undoubtedly, the cacique's regional need for paramilitaries is linked to the region's high drug production. According to reticent residents of the Loxicha region, the pistoleros are growing large amounts of marijuana and opium on cacique land (Founders of La Unión,). The link between the government and the caciques, and between the caciques and narcotrafficking, is no doubt crucial in understanding the heavy militarization, the lack of information, and the closely-controlled regional movement of foreigners and Mexicans alike. Unfortunately, information about this critical point is very difficult, if not dangerous, to obtain.
In 1994, the caciques requested the intervention of the State Human Rights Commission (Comisión Estatal de Derechos Humanos, CEDH) to allow their families to return. Pressure was applied to the Municipal President, Professor Agustín Luna Valencia, to accept the return of the caciques. Upon denial of the request, the caciques, headed by Frumencio José García, Miguel Ramírez Juárez, and Cirilo José José, began a campaign to implicate residents of Loxicha as active members of the EPR, or Ejército Popular Revolucionario (Agustín Luna Valencia). In the last days of 1997, the CEDH supported the return of sixty families who had been expelled as late as 1986.
The Sketchy History of the EPR in Oaxaca
Information about the genesis, activities, and structure of the EPR remains vague and sparse. This is due, in part, to the group's lack of a leader or public liaison. In conversations with various Mexican human rights representatives, attitudes and perspectives reflect an ambivalence and skepticism toward the EPR. The EPR´s organization and apparent access to funds has made non-governmental Mexican human rights groups suspect of connections between the EPR and the PRI government. These groups believe the government is using the EPR to conflict and divide the various opposition groups found in southern Mexico (Rubio Cabrera).
The EPR strongholds are found in Hidalgo, Guerrero, the state of Mexico, and the capital city. The group has gained acceptance among the PRD (Partido Revolucionario Democrático or the Democratic Revolutionary Party), specifically the FAC-MLN (Frente Ampio para la Construcción del Movimiento de Liberación Nacional or the Front for the Construction for a National Liberation Movement), as well as the support of LIMEDDH (la Liga Mexicana de Derechos Humanos or the Mexican Human Rights League), the CEDH, and Amnesty International (Sorroza, 12/29/96).
The most violent EPR attacks have taken place in Oaxaca; they have all been directed against local security forces. This makes the suspected connection between the EPR and the government dubious. In fact, the majority of those killed were members of the State and Municipal Police forces. Although state response to EPR activities has been most pronounced in Guerrero, Oaxacans have suffered more detentions and torture at the hands of the government.
In Oaxaca, the EPR used their attacks to diffuse propaganda by way of interviews with local reporters, flyers, and graffiti. Although Oaxaca has experienced the three most violent EPR attacks, the organization has yet to make an official public statement concerning Oaxaca. The published communiqués have appeared in Huasteca, Mexico State, and in the daily liberal paper, La Jornada (Sorroza, 12/29/96). For this reason, many people feel the EPR's intellectual authors are not centered in Oaxaca. However, the government has evidently decided that the Loxicha region is an EPR nerve center. This convenient conclusion may have more to do with local politics and powerful narcotrafficking rings than with EPR activity.
The EPR reciprocates the hostile feelings of the government. In the classic form of a guerrilla revolution, the EPR has no intentions of negotiating with the government. The EPR was asked in a press conference held on September 15, 1986, by the Oaxacan daily Noticias , if dialogue with the Mexican government would be favorable. EPR representative Comandante Francisco responded:
According to a Noticias article published January 7, 1998, the EPR is fighting for a democratic transformation of the society, to improve the social and economic conditions of Mexico, through a legal, yet clandestine, democratic, and armed movement. The primary strategy of the EPR is guerrilla warfare as laid out in The Thoughts and Principles of Guerrilla Tactics, a manual based on the Marxist concept of the revolutionary proletariat class (Velez Ascencio, 1/7/98).
Militarization: The Infrastructure of Institutional
Repression
According to Mata Montiel, a representative of the Latin American Federation of Associations for the Detainees and Disappeared, the region of Loxicha is the most militarized and repressed zone in the country (Velez Ascencio, 1/7/98). However, gathering information on the topic is, once again, all but impossible. Access to the region has been severely restricted. At the end of February, 1997, the Oaxacan Network of Human Rights Groups entered the region as the first observation brigade since the conflict began. The LIMEDDH organized a similar brigade to gather information at the end of April, 1997, yet were forced out prematurely. Since the LIMEDDH visit there have been no non-governmental human rights organizations allowed into the region. However, in February of this year the State Human Rights Commission entered Loxicha with some difficulty. The area is considered so unstable that the state governor would not guarantee the safety of any group visiting the area. That is to say, the army and the police forces have been given the right to reign the terror and repression they so desire (Stephen 1997: 4).
It is estimated that up to 5,000 army troops are posted within the region (Stephen 1997: 4). As in Chiapas, the army used a three-phase strategy of infiltration into the conflicted Loxicha zone. To begin with, the army establishes a large and omnipresent military installation in a central location (Stephen 1997: 6). The creation of a base at El Manzanal, which lies at the junction of Highway 175, running from Oaxaca City to Pochitla and the entrance to San Agustín, illustrates phase one. In phase two, the army proceeds to set up small bases within the community. Often the military take over community lands without permission. Lastly, in phase three, the army makes daily patrols of the community (Stephen 1997: 6). In this way, the army, government, and police reinforce the idea that no area within the region is outside their realm of control.
The implications of the military presence are far reaching. Keep in mind the Zapotec people are simple agriculturists. If they have arms at all, they are simply rifles and machetes. One can only imagine the terror of living among men who carry both automatic weapons and licenses of impunity from the government. The Zapotec people live in constant fear of detention and torture. Most have abandoned their coffee and corn fields in the mountains, fearing that if they are found in the hills they will be implicated as guerrillas. The repression has even prohibited many from going into San Agustín to buy and sell goods at the market. "When soldiers and police arrive to our communities they take what they like without asking, cut down fruit trees, kill the chickens, eat our food, rob our money, loot items of value, and even rape our women." (La Unión 1998: 8)
Chronology of a Witch-Hunt
While rumored to have been in existence for several decades, the EPR remained relatively quiet until June, 1996. On June 28, 1996, the EPR led an armed uprising in el Vado de Aguas Blancas in the state of Guerrero.
In their next appearances, the EPR exhibited their organizational skills. Simultaneous attacks occurred in Tlaxiaco and La Crucesita on August 28, 1996. Tlaxiaco lies in the northwestern mountains of Oaxaca, far from the tranquil coastal town of La Crucesita in the southern region of the state. These two attacks resulted in twelve deaths and seven injuries. Huge caches of ammunition were left at the site of the Tlaxiaco uprising, adding further credence to the contentions of non-governmental human rights groups that the EPR was receiving funds from the government. In the same respect, this fact reveals the absurdity of the government's claim that the EPR has a strong base in Loxicha. How could a group of poor campesinos organize an insurgency group that could afford to leave behind such valuable materials? However, the attack on La Crucesita not Tlaxiaco drew the most attention, due to its proximity to the up-and-coming tourist resort known as Bahias de Huatulco.
For Loxicha residents the importance of La Crucesita reached far beyond the possible impact on tourism. Among the nine casualties was a former municipal official of San Agustín, Fidel Martínez (La Unión 1998: 6). Martínez had stepped down from his official post three months prior to the attack. Placing a former Loxicha official at the scene of an EPR attack strengthened the government´s link between the EPR and Loxicha. Loxicha community members, however, were adamant that any link Martínez might have had with the EPR was his own decision and not a reflection of the community's political tendencies. Yet the ripening political strife between the caciques and the Loxicha residents, in conjunction with the Martínez and thus Loxicha link with the EPR, created the perfect pretext to militarize the zone and further the control of the caciques.
Immediately thereafter, as the first phase of militarization, a military outpost was installed in El Manzanal, at the entrance to the Loxicha region. In phase two, the military began moving into the region. On September 5, 1996, in the first wave of detentions that would number seventy-seven, Francisco Valencia was detained and tortured. The justification given for this violation was merely that he carried a FAC-MLN flyer, which the officials used as evidence of his connection to the EPR (Human Rights Observation Brigade 1997: 2). In a march two days later, Loxicha community representatives protested Valencia's detention. Some 1500 Loxicha residents created an encampment in Oaxaca City´s zocalo , or town square. The Union of Towns Against the Repression and Militarization of the Region of Loxicha organized the protest. Mothers, sisters, wives, daughters and other women and children close to the detainees comprise La Unión. Their demands were simple: improved infrastructure and the demilitarization of the Loxicha region. On September 13, their demands were recognized in a fifteen minute meeting with the Oaxacan governor, Dioforo Carrasco Altamirano. The governor informed them that these issues would be addressed by different functionaries within his office. With respect to militarization, Carrasco claimed that he could not remove the military encampments and outposts for reasons of "national security." On September 15, the Zapotec protesters withdrew from the zocalo, realizing that their requests for demilitarization had fallen on deaf ears, yet hopeful for the prospects of development projects (Human Rights Observation Brigade 1997: 2).
Rather than investing money into the well-needed development of Loxicha, the government invested instead in further military operations. On September 25, 1996, more than 43 mobile units and approximately 500 men, including the Preventative Police, the State and Federal Judicial Police, and the Mexican Army, invaded the community of San Agustín. These armed men tore through the village, detaining students, heads of family, farmers, and municipal authorities, many of whom were beaten. In addition, many homes were searched and robbed. The police officials acted in blatant disregard of the law, violating articles fourteen, sixteen and twenty-two of the Mexican Constitution. Article fourteen clearly states that no one can be deprived of life, property, possessions, or liberty. Article sixteen guarantees the individual right not to be harassed in one's person, property, papers, family, home, or possession without a written mandate. Lastly, article twenty-two corresponds to the American law prohibiting cruel and unusual punishment. The forces went so far as to loot the Municipal Palace, considered sacred by residents. Needless to say, for the three thousand inhabitants of the town (making the ration of military to civilians an outstanding one to three) this surprise attack was inconceivable. The Union of Towns Against Repression and Militarization in the Region of Loxicha succinctly express the feelings of the residents: "These actions were carried out against our humble town with all the impunity granted by the powerful arms, tanks, and despotic attitude of the armed forces." (La Unión: 2)
During the attack, several municipal authorities were detained. Among the detainees was the Municipal President, Professor Agustín Luna Valencia, the Municipal Treasurer, Professor Fortino Enríquez Hernández, the Sub-Treasurer, C. Isias Ambrosio Ambrosio, and the Municipal Secretary, C. Manuel Nicandro Ambrosio. Two municipal officers were also detained. After being tortured and forced to identify the local leaders of the EPR, they were set free on bail. Professor Alpidio Ramírez García and two farmers, Tiberio Martinez and Pedro Pérez Almaraz, were identified as the leaders. They were held at Pochutla and later transferred to Oaxaca City (Human Rights Observation Brigade 1997: 3).
After having completed their sweep of San Agustín, the armed forces moved into the town of San Francisco. In San Francisco, they used the same brute force, detaining the two Municipal officials, C. Emiliano Jose Martínez and C. Luis Martínez, both accused of being members of the EPR. All told, twenty men were illegally detained on this day.
Recalling the history of the regional caciques, it is not surprising that they had a hand in the violence. According to a report by the Union of Towns Against the Repression and Militarization of the Region of Loxicha, ten former caciques participated in the siege. They were identified as the same men who had worked during the 1970s as paid gunmen for the regional caciques and who had been expelled in 1978. These ten men appeared dressed as Judicial Federal Police and operated from the back of trucks, identifying the community members to be detained and falsely linking them with the EPR.
Once again, the inhabitants of the communities were driven to install their encampment in the zocalo to demand that the state government release the prisoners and demilitarize the region. On October 9, 1996, these renewed efforts were answered with the transfer of prisoners from Oaxaca City to Almoloya de Juarez in Mexico City, one of the two maximum security prisons in the republic. As a consequence of the transfer, the people from Loxicha marched to Mexico City, building yet another encampment outside the office of the Secretary of State. Unfortunately, on October 15, while in talks with the Secretary of State, San Agustín was invaded again, and five inhabitants were detained under accusations of EPR links. On October 26, the community stopped their mobilizations in the hope of advancing the negotiation process by eliminating any pretext the Federal Government might use to impede it.
In response to the show of good faith by the people of Loxicha, the government orchestrated yet another invasion. On November 7, 1996, at three o'clock in the morning some 500 men from the same integrated forces violently entered San Agustín, knocking down doors, looting homes, and threatening inhabitant with firearms. Again, former caciques dressed as Judicial Federal Police sat in the truck beds signaling who was to be detained (Human Rights Observation Brigade 1997: 3).
After the raid on San Agustín, the forces carried out similar campaigns in Quelove, Río Santa Cruz, Magdalena, La Conchuda, La Sirena, and Loma Bonita. At the end of yet another day of institutionalized terror and brutality, twenty-two Loxicha residents were arrested and detained. Among those detained were three teachers and the Municipal President, Gaudencio García Martínez. Those captured endured beatings, torture, and threats. All were forced to sign blank documents, to be filled in with whatever confession served the officials, or prefabricated confessions, to the same end.
The first reports of the American Federal Bureau of Investigation presence result from this November raid. According to reports from San Agustín, ten men dressed in black, with FBI insignias on their sweaters and caps, were present during the sweeps (Ascencio, 12/22/92). The men were tall, with North American Features, and did not speak Spanish well. In the testimonies that follow, the detainees also mention the presence of the FBI (Laureano Ramírez García). According to a December 22, 1996, Noticias article Victor Clark Alfaro, Director of the Binational Center on Human Rights, urged an investigation of the FBI presence in the Loxicha region. Alfaro considers the FBI accessories to the gross human rights violations perpetrated by the military and police in the sweeps to detain supposed EPR members. While the information is terse as to why an U.S. domestic intelligence organization would be in southern Mexico involving itself in a decidedly illegal Mexican military, police, and government operation, we have confirmed that the FBI was on official business, presenting an anti-hostage program, in Mexico at the end of 1997, the time of the raid (Ochoa,).
Elements of the Preventative, Federal, and State Judicial Police made several more sweeps in the communities of San Vicente Yogonday, Loma Bonita, Llano Maguey, Santa Cruz de la Flores, and Magdalena between the dates of November 26 and December 1. During the invasions, an additional twenty people were arrested and detained. One of the detainees was tortured to death, although the government declared it an accidental death (Human Rights Observation Brigade 1997:2).
Three days later, on December 3, another wave of detentions followed. In Oaxaca City, three people were arrested, charged with taking over a local radio station with the intention of broadcasting EPR propaganda. As in prior raids, the Judicial Police forcefully entered the office of the CODPO (Coordinador de Organización Democráticas Populares de Oaxaca or the Coordinator of Popular Democratic Organizations of Oaxaca). In this office, the wives and children of the other detainees, who had been keeping vigil by day in the Governor's Palace encampment, were resting for the night. During the raid, two computers and 2,500 pesos (approximately $300 U.S.) that had been painstakingly collected between November 20 and December 2, were looted by the Judicial officials. To add insult to injury, in addition to the arrests of the four men, the Judiciales forced fourteen women and fifteen children into their truck and took them to the State Attorney General´s office where they were held with no formal charges until the following morning (La Unión 1997:5). In the familiar pattern, the men were tortured and detained.
The reign of terror wrought by arbitrary and illegal detentions continued in a series of detentions beginning on January 7, 1997, with the abduction of Irineo Ortega from the community of La Conchuda. Thirteen days later, Constantino José Santiago was detained in San Agustín. In the last days of January, two more men were taken. The last detention to be addressed in this report took place on February 19 in Llano Paraje.
To date there have been 77 detentions, 10 assassinations, and 4 disappearances from Loxicha. Those detained are being held in several different prisons in three different states (Ochoa). According to Mexican law, the transfer of prisoners between states is legal. However, the transfer causes obvious cost and time difficulties for families who wish to visit loved ones. Thus, the men are removed from any base of support, emotional or otherwise. The prisoners are being held in: Almoloya de Juarez, Maximum Security Federal State Rehabilitation Center, in Mexico City; Men´s Prison North, South, and East in Mexico City; Tula City in the state of Hidalgo; Santa Maria Ixcotel in Oaxaca City; Consejo Tutlar in Oaxaca State; and Huatulco in Oaxaca State. The crimes the men are accused of include: homicide, attempted homicide, delinquent associations, arms supplying, terrorism, conspiracy, sabotage, assault and battery, denial of personal liberty, theft, property damage, rebellion, carrying fire arms without a license, and carrying arms reserved exclusively for army and air force use.
As a result of the terror wrought by habitual raids on these small Loxicha communities, many residents have fled. Primarily led by the men of the community, this exodus has left the region inhabited largely by women and children.
Testimonies of Psychological and Physical Torture
This section synthesizes the testimonies of thirty-seven Zapotec men from ten different communities. The men were interviewed by the Brigade of Oaxacan Human Rights workers in February, 1997. Throughout all of the testimonies, a general story of how the detentions and tortures were carried out can be deducted, although inevitably differences exist in each individual case.
In surprise sieges orchestrated by the integrated forces, the majority of the men were taken from their homes in the early morning hours, although some were taken from buses or trucks. Repeatedly mentioned in the testimonies were the Judiciales, or the Federal Judicial Police. The most cruel of the armed forces, these men dress in all black, carry machine guns, and are considered a brute squad. Without any arrest warrant or invitation, the police and army would kick in the doors of the humble, often makeshift houses, shooting off rounds to intimidate those within. Many of the detainees were still in bed, and were dragged out naked or only partially clothed. "They broke down the door of my house and shot off their guns just a few centimeters from where my children were sleeping. From there they pulled men out of bed, naked, hitting me with the butt of their rifle. They hit me three times with the butt of their rifle in the back and kicked me forcefully four times on the top of my left foot (Virgilio Cruz Luna).
After being beaten, threatened, and humiliated in front of their
families, the men were forced into truckbeds. Many of the
campesinos as former pistoleros. Gaudencia García Martínez, the acting Municipal President, boldly questioned, "Who are you? Are you Judiciales or Pistoleros? " The armed men forced their way into Martínez´s house. Martínez had enough time to shut the door again. After threatening to burn down the house, Gaudencia let the armed men in. They handcuffed him, grabbed him by the neck, and threw him in the back of the truck (Gaudencia García Martínez).
Most of the testimonies then describe two large dogs being placed in the back of the truck to intimidate and quiet the men. During the hour-and-a-half long trip from San Agustín to Huatulco, the truckload of alleged EPR guerrillas, mostly farmers and teachers, were ordered to sit still and not disturb the dogs. Each was told as they climbed in the truck, "These dogs are more valuable than you. If we hear them bark, we will beat the shit out of you!"
En route to Huatulco, many of the trucks stopped at the ranch known as San Martín. It is here, apparently, that most the men were tortured. To begin with, they were blindfolded. Heinous acts of physical torture followed, including beating, kicking, and slapping. The men were also subjected to different forms of asphyxiation, either with a plastic bag pulled over their head, or blocking the nose and mouth with a cloth. One of the torture techniques used widely by the Judiciales was the forcing of carbonated water, sometimes in combination with chili powder, up the noses of these men, while their mouthes were blocked. Even more horrific to imagine was the use of electrical shock to the testicles, nipples, and other parts of the body. Understandably, most of the testimonies do not go into detail about the torture any more than a list of what each endured. However, Gaudencia García Martínez did comment, "The application of carbonated water while blocking the mouth with a rag is one of the most cruel and inhumane tortures that one can ever imagine in this world of torments and cruelty."
Physical violations were routinely accompanied by sinister psychological tortures. These men were tormented by being forced to listen to their fellow detainees´ pain, a pain that they had either suffered or anticipated enduring. Many testimonies describe threats of being thrown out of airplanes to sea while in transit to prison. In addition, Judiciales constantly threatened to rape, beat, or otherwise violate the detainees' family members if they did not cooperate. Cooperation entailed admitting ties with the EPR or implicating other community members. Throughout the detentions and torture, the men were constantly barraded with racial slurs. Some of the degrading remarks about the Zapotec natives included, "You Indians smell like shit."
Bruised and cut physically and forever mentally-scarred, most of the men were transferred to Huatulco. There they were put in small, dank rooms. They were given no food or water for two days. The rooms had no toilets, forcing the men to defecate and urinate in the small, shared space. At any hour, day or night, they could be forcefully taken by the Judiciales to give personal information, to sign blank documents that would later serve as their declarations, or to submit to further torture. The interrogations involved laboriously repeated questions about the EPR. Inquiries focused on the EPR´s attacks on La Crucesita and Tlaxiaco, personal affiliation, EPR members, weapon caches, funding, meetings, and organizational structure.
The majority of the accused do not speak Spanish, only their native Zapotec. Although the Mexican Constitution guarantees the right to a translator for non-Spanish speakers, most of the interrogations took place in Spanish without translation. One testimony refers to the presence of a bilingual Spanish-Zapotec speaker during the translation of a detainee´s declaration. By her account, the translation was gravely erroneous.
From Huatulco, in many cases, the detainees were transferred by small aircraft to one of the several prisons in Oaxaca, Hidalgo, or Mexico State. A year and a half later, many of these men are still incarcerated on the proof of declarations or blank documents signed under extreme torture.
Conclusions and Questions Yet to be Answered
Although information about Loxicha is unreliable, and often unavailable due to its highly political nature, some conclusions can be made concerning unabated human rights violations within the area over the last two years. The Loxicha history demonstrates the Mexican government, police, and military's blatant disregard for clearly stated domestic human rights laws, not to mention international human rights agreements signed by Mexico.
While the Mexican Constitution is one of the more progressive in Latin America, the case of Loxicha reveals much of this progressivism to be tokenism. All too often the Constitution is completely ignored. Firstly, the militarization of the zone, specifically the outpost at Manzanal, is in direct violation of the right to free transit throughout the republic, granted in article eleven. Secondly, as we have stated, the arbitrary detentions are a breach of article fourteen. For the most part, arrest warrants did not exist for these detentions. Often they were issued retroactively by the Ministerio Publico , or Public Minister. Many of the non-Spanish speaking Zapotec people were denied their right to a translator, also guaranteed in the Constitution. Additionally, many were forced to sign blank document that would serve as their declarations. These declarations reflect an obvious fabrication of guilt by the Judicial officials. Lastly, yet another of the laws of the Constitution, article twenty-two, was violated in the cruel and unusual physical and psychological torture of the detainees in order to obtain declarations of EPR allegiance. Detainees were also offered money to denounce their fellow community members.
Today Loxicha is inhabited mostly by women and children. They walk in a constant shadow of fear: fear of being raped, beaten, robbed, or mistreated at the whims of the military and the police. Indeed, these people have no recourse. The federal government has taken no action on the issue, and the governor of Oaxaca has all but publicly granted the military and police total impunity. The international community is ignorant of the gruesome situation. The only course of action available to Loxicha residents is the organization of their encampments and marches. For the last year and a half, the Union of Towns Against the Repression and Militarization of the Region of Loxicha has been camped out in front of the Governor´s Palace in Oaxaca City. Alas, it appears their efforts have been fruitless. The question remains: Why has there been so little attention to this region and the cries of the Zapotec people?
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