Mexico News - March 20, 1998
We are sending the following wire stories from this week:
- Zedillo launches PR war against Mexico's rebels -- 3/18 (Reuters)
- Mexico's Military Purchases from U.S. Soar -- 3/15 (Reuters)
- Mexico Massacre Suspects Surrender -- 3/18 CHENALHO, (AP)
- Nobel laureate Menchu: dialogue key in Chiapas -- 3/19 (Reuters)
1. Zedillo launches PR war against Mexico's rebels
By David Luhnow
MEXICO CITY, March 18 (Reuters) - President Ernesto Zedillo hopes to
use a surprise initiative on the Chiapas conflict to gain the upper
hand in a public relations war with charismatic rebel leader
Subcommander Marcos, analysts said on Wednesday.
Zedillo's weekend proposal on Indian rights, one of the key issues in
the troubled state's simmering guerrilla rebellion, won praise from
many Mexicans tired of a stalemate between the government and Indian
rebels who rose up in 1994. Unable to win on the battlefield, the
charismatic pipe-smoking Marcos has consistently scored public
relations coups by painting the Mexican government as inept and
undemocratic. He has thrust his small rebel movement onto the
international stage by using the Internet and hosting high-profile
foreign guests like France's Danielle Mitterrand, wife of late French
President Francois Mitterrand.
Now Zedillo has launched his own solution to the conflict, saying the
country was tired of waiting for negotiators to come up with a
proposal everyone agreed to.
"Zedillo is taking the political initiative here and it's not
gone badly for him. Many Mexicans are frankly tired of the issue and
want progress," said Jaime Sanchez Susarrey, a political science
professor at the University of Guadalajara.
Political columnists, even some of Zedillo's traditional critics,
welcomed the move as an effort to break a deadlock that began when
Zapatista rebels quit peace talks over the Indian rights issue in
September 1996. The rebels accused the government of failing to
legislate the necessary constitutional changes to turn an initial
agreement on Indian rights into law.
"My reservations notwithstanding, I applaud the move..."
political commentator Miguel Angel Granados Chapa wrote in Reforma
newspaper. He said he was mainly unhappy that the government took so
long to come up with its bill. The bill, sent by Zedillo to Congress
over the weekend, is expected to be changed slightly in order to win
the necessary two-thirds majority.
Analysts expect the ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) to
ally with the conservative National Action Party (PAN) -- no friend of
the rebels -- to get it through.
But the proposal has sparked controversy. Mexico's left-wing
opposition -- generally sympathetic to the Zapatistas -- and a
church-led body charged with negotiating to end the conflict sharply
criticized the move, saying Zedillo should not have acted
unilaterally.
"The proposal ... violates the spirit of peace talks ... Passage
of the proposal ... would seriously jeopardize the credibility of the
peace talks and could lead to a wider crisis," the church-led
National Intermediation Commission (Conai) said in full-page ads in
newspapers on Wednesday.
Conai said the government proposal seriously weakened some of the main
points of the San Andres accord on Indian rights signed between both
sides in early 1996. Specifically, it accused the government of
failing to recognize Indian judicial and political customs.
The Zapatistas, holed up in their jungle strongholds and
surrounded by thousands of Mexican army troops, have yet to respond to
the proposal.
But others said Zedillo may have painted the Zapatistas into a
political corner. If they reject the agreement, as seems likely, they
will appear inflexible in the public eye and support for a military
solution to the conflict could grow.
The move comes amid increased anti-Zapatista rhetoric from the
government. Zedillo was quoted on Wednesday as telling Chilean
newspaper El Mercurio in an interview that "the Zapatistas want
to provoke violence."
Meanwhile, an official ad campaign on television and radio has
cast the government as the peacemaker.
"To the military and paramilitary pressure already on the
Zapatistas, the government has now added a public relations and legal
ambush," Carlos Montemayor, an expert on Mexican guerrillas,
wrote in the leftist daily La Jornada.
2. Mexico's Military Purchases from U.S. Soar - Report
MEXICO CITY, March 15 (Reuters) - Mexico's military purchases from
the United States increased sharply in 1997, along with procurement
from private sources, La Jornada newspaper reported on Sunday.
Citing official U.S. government documents, La Jornada said
U.S. Foreign Military Sales (FMS) to Mexico rose to $28 million in
1997 from $4.8 million the year before. The Mexican Defense Ministry
had no comment on the report.
La Jornada said U.S. officials had no details of the military
supplies sold last year, but in 1996 the shopping list included mainly
communications equipment, trucks and aircraft parts.
The purchases placed Mexico third behind Colombia and Venezuela in
terms of Latin American buyers of military supplies from Washington,
the paper said.
The newspaper said State Department officials had also confirmed
that sales of military supplies to Mexico by private companies totaled
at least $12 million last year.
In addition to commercial trade, the Mexican army acquired 73
helicopters and is expected to receive considerable amounts of machine
gun ammunition this year under a U.S. program to hand excess equipment
over to its allies.
Experts say the Mexican army has grown quickly in size and power
since President Ernesto Zedillo took office in December 1994, leading
the fight against everything from drug trafficking to guerrillas and
common crime. Spending on the military doubled between 1995 and 1998.
REUTERS
3. Mexico Massacre Suspects Surrender
Wednesday, March 18, 1998
CHENALHO, Mexico (AP) -- Thirty-five men accused of taking part in
a massacre in Mexico's southern Chiapas state surrendered to federal
officials Wednesday.
The men, almost all governing-party supporters from local Indian
villages, lined up in their ragged clothing at a cultural center,
where they surrendered to officials from the attorney general's
office. Some insisted they were innocent and demanded that supporters
of the leftist Zapatista National Liberation Army be prosecuted as
well.
"We are turning ourselves in so that we will not be
persecuted because the Zapatistas say that we are killers. But that is
not true. We are innocent," said Martin Entzin Luna of the
village of Los Chorros. "We demand that there is justice for all,
that the others are also punished."
More than 150 people -- including several state police officers
have been charged or are under formal investigation in the Dec. 22
raid on the hamlet of Acteal, where 45 people were shot to death.
It was the bloodiest outburst in the sporadic violence in Chiapas
state since a January 1994 cease-fire halted fighting between the
federal army and the Zapatistas.
Government supporters say Zapatista sympathizers killed at least
18 of their comrades in the Chenalho region, which encompasses Acteal
and Los Chorros. They said the killings occurred between May and
December last year with little response by officials.
Prosecutors say residents of Los Chorros believed people from
Acteal were involved in at least some of the 18 killings. Many of
those in Acteal were refugees driven out of their own villages by
pro-government mobs. The incident forced the Chiapas state governor
and other officials to resign.
Both pro- and anti-government groups have been accused of using
killings, assaults and house-burnings against their foes in many parts
of the state -- a situation aggravated by the fact that
government-rebel peace talks have been stalled for almost two years.
Last week, the federal attorney general's office said in a report
that residents of Los Chorros formed a self-defense brigade in
September and began plotting an attack on Acteal in October.
They reportedly took action in December after the brother of a
pro-government official was killed.
State police ignored telephoned reports that the attack was under
way and later bungled the initial investigation, federal prosecutors
said. Several state police officers have been arrested on charges of
helping transport the illegal weapons used by the attackers.
Copyright 1998 The Associated Press
4. Nobel laureate Menchu says dialogue key in Chiapas
CRISTOBAL DE LAS CASAS, Mexico, March 19 (Reuters) - Nobel Peace
Prize laureate Rigoberta Menchu said on Thursday pursuing dialogue was
the only way to end violent conflict in the southern Mexican state of
Chiapas.
Menchu, a Guatemalan Mayan Indian who has just received Mexican
citizenship as well, visited the village of Acteal where paramilitary
gunmen opened fire on Dec. 22, 1997, on Indian supporters of the
state's Zapatista National Liberation Army (EZLN) rebels. It was the
worst act of bloodshed since the guerrillas took up arms in early
1994.
"Negotiations and dialogue are the only alternative, the only
path to resolve the problems that come about when there are internal
conflicts involving arms," Menchu said.
Tensions continue to run high in parts of Chiapas. Villagers in
the small community of La Realidad complained that military
helicopters and airplanes were making up to 10 flights a day over the
area. La Realidad is considered a stronghold of the Zapatista rebels.
"We are expecting an attack from one moment to the other,"
said a representative of the village known only as "Max."
Menchu won the Nobel prize in 1992 for her human rights work in
Guatemala, where Indians bore the brunt of a vicious counterinsurgency
campaign aimed at snuffing out the rebels.
REUTERS