Mexican Government Launches Major Political Offensive Against Zapatistas
by Peter Gellert
[Mexico City] - The Mexican government is waging a major
political offensive on several fronts against the Zapatista
rebels of Chiapas. At the same time the situation in the southern
Mexican state is marked by a growing polarization and heightened
instability, with 27 different paramilitary bands operating with
impunity in as many municipalities.
Four years after the Zapatistas armed insurrection, no end
is in sight. While the Zapatista National Liberation Army--the
EZLN--has not engaged in military confrontations with the army,
neither have the government or its army been able to push the
rebels out of their rain forest strongholds. Peace negotiations
and the dialogue process have been on hold for 17 months.
Since the New Year, when the Interior Minister was replaced
and a new Peace Commissioner appointed, the government has moved
to resolve the Chiapas crisis in its favor, taking advantage of a
certain war weariness both in the state and nationally, and
playing its cards rather intelligently.
In recent days and weeks, the government has moved on three
fronts:
On one level, the government has acted to weaken,
counteract, and isolate the presence of foreign observers, a
major thorn in the side of the Mexican government, which is very
sensitive about its international isolation and criticisms from
abroad. In addition to deporting foreigners--including respected
clergymen--deemed openly sympathetic to the Zapatistas, the
government has waged a non-stop campaign almost daily in the mass
media and in social organizations such as official unions and
peasant groups charging non-government organizations with
interfering in Mexican domestic affairs and calling for the
expulsion of trouble-making foreigners.
Federal Attorney General Jorge Madrazo, for example, has
publicly charged international human rights groups with seeking
to intervene in Mexico for purely political reasons, unrelated to
humanitarian concerns or considerations of social justice.
The government has hypocritically invoked Mexican
nationalism to ward off criticism from abroad and attempt to
rally popular support in favor of the country's national
sovereignty, supposedly under attack by leftists and non-
government organizations that appeal for support from the
international community.
On a second level, the government is attempting to weaken
the Legislative Peace Commission, the COCOPA, which was a strong
counterweight to the government due to its consensus agreements
involving all political parties represented in parliament and its
calls for scaling back the military presence in Chiapas and
passing legislation to implement the San Andres Peace Accords.
President Zedillo has announced that the executive branch
would unilaterally send its own bill to Congress on indigenous
rights. The proposal, which will have the support of the ruling
Institutional Revolutionary Party and the conservative National
Action Party, effectively nullifies the original COCOPA proposal,
which was satisfactory to the Zapatistas. The government's plan
has run into problems, however, with the left-leaning Party of
the Democratic Revolution (PRD) which opposes the president's
bill as an affront to the peace process and has announced that it
will not even participate in the congressional debate on the
question.
On a third level, all week long Interior Minister Francisco
Labastida and other Ministry officials have publicly indicated
that they are considering disqualifying the National
Intermediation Commission, the CONAI, headed by Catholic Bishop
Samuel Ruiz, for its alleged partiality to the Zapatistas. The
CONAI has long opposed government policy in Chiapas, and more
recently placed ads in the national dailies criticizing Zedillo's
indigenous rights bill as contrary to the spirit and letter of
the San Andres Peace Accords on the question of autonomy. The
CONAI charged that the government's proposal subordinates Indian
autonomy to higher government structures and limits it to a
municipal and community level, instead of being conceived as
national and ethnic in scope.
Backed by most of the country's press and the powerful
television consortiums, the government's campaign has had a
certain, if undetermined, impact on public opinion. The Catholic
Church is reportedly split on the issue, while opposing the
expulsion of foreign priests and defending Samuel Ruiz from the
most despicable attacks.
Throughout all this, however, the Zapatistas themselves have
been completely silent, including in response to calls from
sympathetic observers such as PRD legislator and COCOPA member
Carlos Payan to resume the dialogue with the government. On the
other hand, the Zapatista National Liberation Front (FZLN),
universally considered the EZLN's political expression, has been
actively denouncing latest government moves and building protest
actions with other forces.
Civil society itself is again beginning to respond, although
much momentum has been lost compared to the groundswell of
protests following the Acteal massacre last December 22. Hundreds
of non-governmental and social organizations, the PRD, the FZLN,
and the National Indigenous Congress are holding peace rallies on
Saturday, April 4, against government policy in Chiapas.
The National Indigenous Congress, a nationwide umbrella
organization, local Indian groups and independent peasant
organizations have announced a national march on Mexico City for
Friday, April 10,--the anniversary of peasant revolutionary
Emiliano Zapata's assassination in 1919 and traditional date of
peasant mobilizations--from four cardinal points in Mexico. The
Indigenous Uprising for Peace, as it's called, will culminate
with an indefinite sit-in by thousands in front of the National
Palace in downtown Mexico City.
The preceding article is clipped from:
MEXICAN LABOR NEWS AND ANALYSIS
April 2, 1998
Vol. III, No. 7
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