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freepalestine
7th January 2011, 22:27
Zapatistas: The war with no breath? The poverty-stricken people of Chiapas are still marginalised and experiencing great hardship, 17 years after rebellion.

Chris Arsenault Last Modified: 01 Jan 2011 12:
30 GMT








http://english.aljazeera.net/mritems/Images/2010/12/21/20101221173259361436_20.jpgZapatista rebels, mostly indigenous peasants, wanted access to farm land, health care, education and political rights for the poor, near-feudal state [EPA]

Tuxtla Gutierrez, Dec 31, 2010 - Seventeen years after rallying cries for land and freedom sparked the Zapatista rebellion, a quiet mist cloaks the mountains of Chiapas state in southeast Mexico.
Unlike previous years, there are no major celebrations, no marches or fiery public speeches by rebels fighting for the region’s long-neglected indigenous people.
Hailed by the New York Times in 1994 as the "first postmodern Latin American revolution", some commentators in Mexico and beyond now consider the Zapatistas a spent force, a rebellion with strong rhetoric and little capacity, lacking the ability to deliver beyond its rural base.
"The transformations the movement tried to make did not arrive," says Gaston Garcia Flores, a professor of philosophy who studies social movements at the Universidad del Mar in southern Mexico.
But, after being pushed around for more than 500 years, others think it is naïve to consider the Zapatistas down for the count.
Everything can change, on New Year's Day
The rebellion itself began on New Year's Day 1994, when some 3,000 poorly armed indigenous rebels seized six towns in Chiapas, Mexico’s southernmost state.
Few disputed their right to be angry.
Poverty in the area, as defined by the international dollar-per-day threshold, hovered around 56 per cent when the rebellion began, with many families lacking access to basic healthcare and education, while a small elite controlled much of the arable land, in near-feudal conditions.
In rural communities, an estimated 20 per cent of children died before the age of five.
The Zapatistas timed the rebellion to coincide with the implementation of NAFTA, the North American Free Trade Agreement, between Canada, the US and Mexico.
They called NAFTA a "death sentence", as it removed from the Mexican constitution Article 27, a provision won during the first Mexican revolution in the early part of the last century, designed to guarantee collective property rights to those who worked the land.
Vocal opposition to NAFTA gained the rebels support from trade unions and other social movements who tried - and failed - to stop the agreement.
However, it was their style of speaking, specifically the words of the group’s iconic pipe-smoking public face, Subcomandante Marcos, who expressed something new and electrifying for an insurgent group.
Unlike Marxist revolutionaries who preceded them, the Zapatistas did not speak in certainties; their words were more poetry than political polemics.
"They had a lot of political imagination and successfully used the Internet and new communications technology," says professor Flores, between drags on a cigarette at an outdoor café.
The Zapatistas wanted "to listen and learn about struggles ... to shake the country from below and turn it on its head" and to create "a world where many worlds fit". And those ideas resonated, in Mexico and beyond.
People of the Sun
In the days following the rebellion, some 100,000 people rallied in Mexico City chanting, "we are all Zapatistas".
The Mexican army, apparently caught flat-footed by the fighting, countered soon after New Year's Day, pushing the poorly armed rebels out of the towns they had seized.
"Without that broader popular support, the government would have destroyed them in the most violent way," says Blanche Petrich, a journalist with La Journada newspaper in Mexico who has covered the Zapatistas since the uprising.
Peace negotiations followed a unilateral ceasefire by the Zapatistas. The group pressed for indigenous autonomy over traditional territories, and better access to health, education, justice, democracy and land.
With much fanfare and relief, the Mexican government and the Zapatistas signed the San Andres Accords in 1996, designed to bring peace to the region by dealing with root causes of the conflict.
The government, however, never implemented the accords. "The Zapatistas decided to stop the negotiations due to a lack of political will," says Miguel Alvarez, a former member of the national commission for negotiation, who worked closely with the Catholic Church in mediating between the Zapatistas and the government.
The Mexican military maintained a large force in the area during this period with harassment - including well-documented rapes and killings by the military or paramilitary allies of large land-owners.
The corn and sickle rebellion
To push for the spirit of the accords, the Zapatistas took their show on the road in 2001, travelling throughout Mexico, pushing for an end to military harassment in Chiapas as well as reinforcing their message of improving indigenous rights across the country.
At the climax, up to 400,000 people, and much of the world's media, packed the main square in Mexico City to hear the Zapatistas' message. But, as in San Andres, popular support did not bring institutional change from the government and the Zapatistas headed back to Chiapas.
This time around, they decided not to wait for the state to grant autonomy. In 2003, they announced the creation of Juntas de Buen Gobierno (good government committees) to cement a form of social organization autonomous from the Mexican state.
"[The Juntas] are the best expression of the San Andres accords, an example of how to rule an indigenous community without discrimination," says Alvarez, who now heads an NGO in Chiapas. The Juntas mediated disputes within Zapatista territories, through a parallel justice system, and attempted to coordinate better development to improve living standards in the communities.
Tasks like growing corn, building indigenous-run schools and creating artisan cooperatives are hardly the stuff of front page headlines. The movement was being effectively marginalised by the Mexican government, leading the Zapatistas to refocus and re-enter the greater imagination of the national and international community.
Grassroots rebranding
To recapture some attention, they launched La otra campana (the "Other Campaign") in 2006, with Subcommandante Marcos rebranded as "delegate zero", traveling across the country on a motorbike to build grass-roots support, as an alternative campaign to presidential elections which happening at the same time.
"The contrast between the Other Campaign and the first march [in 2001] was enormous," says Petrich.
By most accounts, the Other Campaign failed. It did not ignite a grassroots national movement. And only a few hundred people attended rallies in Mexico City.
Marcos used the platform to consistently bash Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, a left-leaning presidential candidate. Marcos advised his supporters not to vote at all.
Lopez Obrador did not become president, in an election marred by accusations of irregularities and fraud.
"A lot of people who could have voted in that moment, especially the youth, did not," says professor Flores. "Marcos divided the left with his sectarianism and did a good job for the right."
After weeks of street demonstrations in support of Lopez Obrador, Felipe Calderon took the presidency and promptly declared an all out war on drugs, leading to the spiraling violence Mexico now faces.
The rhetoric of silence: a change in tact?
Since the Other Campaign, the Zapatistas have stayed away from the press and Marcos, who is believed to be a former communications professor, seems to have been put out to pasture by the group's indigenous leaders.
Unconfirmed reports from a well-placed source in San Cristobal de las Casas allege that Immanuel Wallerstein, a distinguished leftist academic, attempted to get Marcos a job at Binghamton University in the US. However the university was unwilling to entertain the idea.
In the Zapatistas' base communities, reporters have not been allowed interviews with key movement activists, since 2008. But some long-time observers don't think that is a major issue of any concern.
"Despite the fact that Zapatistas are no longer in the media, it does not mean that they are disappearing, rather they are trying to get better conditions of living," says Alvarez, the former mediator.
"The Zapatistas' problems have not been solved but the fact that they have recovered their dignity [as indigenous people] has been their first big achievement."
In the Zapatistas' base communities, populated by an estimated 100,000 indigenous supporters, poverty is still widespread. Key activists, who say they have struggled for a better world for the past seventeen years, still cannot afford shoes for their kids, forcing them to walk and work barefoot in the mud.
However there have been tangible, material successes, not just advances in dignity and other abstract concepts.
Pablo Gonzalez Casanova, the former rector of Mexico’s National Autonomus University (UNAM), conducted a public health study comparing Zapatista communities in Chiapas to their non-Zapatista counterparts.
Zapatista health providers extended coverage to 63 per cent of all expectant mothers, double the average for non-Zapatista communities in the area. Seventy-four per cent of Zapatista homes have access to toilets, as opposed to 54 per cent in non-Zapatista homes.
Zapatista communities also have significantly better statistics for infant mortality than other rural areas in Chiapas.
"The position of women in the communities has increased greatly," Petrich says. "They used to be kept in the margins, basically treated like domestic animals. Now the role they play is crucial. This is not a minor result," she says, adding that the Zapatistas have also made major strides in education.
As a broader political movement, they managed to light the fire of resentment boiling within Mexico. However, Petrich believes the Zapatistas "did not go as far as they expected".
Even seventeen years to the day after the first shots were fired, the legacy of the movement remains unclear. A popular Zapatista slogan, plastered on posters around their communities, demands "everything for everyone, nothing for ourselves".
Perhaps the Zapatistas gained something in their small corner of the world, even if they didn't get everything for everyone.


http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/features/2011/01/20111183946608868.html

¿Que?
7th January 2011, 23:08
The only thing I'm wondering is if things may have turned out better had Obrador won that election. My impression at the time was that he was pretty left not just left-leaning, but I could be wrong.

Savage
7th January 2011, 23:48
I don't know how anyone expected any outcome other than this, if isolated, socialism will be repressed by the market, there is no way around this.

erupt
7th January 2011, 23:50
No matter what, the Zapatistas will always have my respect.

ellipsis
8th January 2011, 02:42
Yah the Zapatistas are bad ass. I used to be more involved in the solidarity movement with them, visiting chiapas(although not entering zapatista territory), attending zapatista events in the US, etc.
The most ironic thing about the current situation in Mexico is that one of the largest and most capable/brutal cartels, los zetas is mad up of ex-counter-insurgent special forces who were trained originally to fight the zapatistas.

Ele'ill
8th January 2011, 03:02
And weren't they trained by US forces?

FreeFocus
8th January 2011, 03:10
It is important to note that the Zapatistas have made important gains for Indigenous dignity, as well as material progress outlined in the article (health care, toilets, sanitation, etc). I was surprised to read that Wallerstein wanted Marcos to get a job at Binghamton University :rolleyes:. I know it has a reputation for being leftist, but taking people out of the struggle on the ground and planting them in academia is suspect.

The Zapatistas have made some mistakes. Building alternative institutions was the right thing to do, and I hope that they continue to succeed. Could there have been more outreach/linkages with urban workers? Maybe. But there's also a lot of racism in Mexican society; despite this, the Zapatistas still got hundreds of thousands to show their support.

I'm concerned about the Zapatistas being able to defend against the state if it attacks directly.

costello1977
8th January 2011, 03:16
Aye, Marco is an academic, and a populist at that. Not really got that much time for him, the struggle itself is a worthwhile one though.

What I do find funny is that plenty of people on here have time for the seperatist movement of chipas, but seem to think the IRA etc is wrong, but I digress. I dont intend to derail this thread.

The point is that all the time that Marcos spent trying to appeal to trendy academic lefties, who invariably become the leaders of the future conservative capitalist state, could have been put to better use. In the end of the day, at least there wasn't a cult of personality created around him akin to the ones we have seen around other psuedo-revolutionaries.

Good luck to the workers in Chipas, may the arm you strike with be strong and free.

Imposter Marxist
8th January 2011, 03:16
It is important to note that the Zapatistas have made important gains for Indigenous dignity, as well as material progress outlined in the article (health care, toilets, sanitation, etc). I was surprised to read that Wallerstein wanted Marcos to get a job at Binghamton University :rolleyes:. I know it has a reputation for being leftist, but taking people out of the struggle on the ground and planting them in academia is suspect.

The Zapatistas have made some mistakes. Building alternative institutions was the right thing to do, and I hope that they continue to succeed. Could there have been more outreach/linkages with urban workers? Maybe. But there's also a lot of racism in Mexican society; despite this, the Zapatistas still got hundreds of thousands to show their support.

I'm concerned about the Zapatistas being able to defend against the state if it attacks directly.


I think that the mexican state won't attack until its sure it can handle the backlash at home. I think thats the main thing preventing the tanks from rolling in.

FreeFocus
8th January 2011, 03:30
Aye, Marco is an academic, and a populist at that. Not really got that much time for him, the struggle itself is a worthwhile one though.

What I do find funny is that plenty of people on here have time for the seperatist movement of chipas, but seem to think the IRA etc is wrong, but I digress. I dont intend to derail this thread.

The point is that all the time that Marcos spent trying to appeal to trendy academic lefties, who invariably become the leaders of the future conservative capitalist state, could have been put to better use. In the end of the day, at least there wasn't a cult of personality created around him akin to the ones we have seen around other psuedo-revolutionaries.

Good luck to the workers in Chipas, may the arm you strike with be strong and free.

He might be an academic, but is that an insult now? He's in the communities and has worked diligently for the Zapatistas. If not for their media outreach and awareness raising, which he was appointed to handle because of his skills, their communities might have been crushed already.

Chiapas isn't exactly a separatist movement, they're trying to build an autonomous space. I guess they're separatist in that they want a space separate from the Mexican state, if you want to look at it that way, but they don't want Chiapas to become an independent state in the international system. But personally I don't oppose the IRA, I find their struggle heroic and inspirational (my position on them and similar movements is more nuanced but I'm not decrying them as "bourgeois opportunist capitalists" etc, etc. But that's another topic).

ellipsis
8th January 2011, 03:45
What I do find funny is that plenty of people on here have time for the seperatist movement of chipas, but seem to think the IRA etc is wrong, but I digress. I dont intend to derail this thread.

I support both movements, in the case of the Ireland, I am more knowledgeable about the historic struggles, the east rebellion, etc.

BIG BROTHER
8th January 2011, 05:10
The Zapatistas have been lost as a political movement capable of brining any change for a long while in Mexico.

Why?
First of all the start of their movement they enjoyed mass support, literally the mases of peasants, workers and students were looking at them for guidance. However when they went to Mexico city, they proposed nothing to the people. With the significant support they had from the masses they could have proven a mighty challenge to the goverment...

Now, all they have done is settle for a meager law, similar to the thousands the Mexican goverment has spewed before that don't result in any real improvement on the indigenous people.

Also ever since Comandanta Ramona died, Marcos has literally become the un-official ruler of the Zapatistas. He is the one brining in all the money from tourism and organizations that donate to the Zapatistas so using that as a leverage he runs the Zapatista's held region.

On top of that the "Other campaing" or "otra campa~na" was nothing but an attempt to divide the left movement in Mexico and weaken Lopez Obrador. Although Obrador is not exactly a Socialist Revolutionary he did have concrete proposals that went against the interests of Imperialism.

Oh and guess what? It the PRI(Mexico's longest ruling party, the one who implemented NAFTA) who provided the securty to Marco's "other campaing"

Also under the pretext of "autonomy" teachers in their regions can not organize....

anyone who is serios about overthrowing capitalism in Chiapas knows better than to deal with the Zapatistas.


Now having that said I'm gonna get my ass dig out all my sources before the anarcho rage sets it :lol:

The Garbage Disposal Unit
8th January 2011, 05:26
Anticapitalist struggles for autonomy are different than nationalist struggles for statehood. If the IRA were advocating for autonomous community control, I'm sure people would be stoked on them . . . however, far from it.

BIG BROTHER
8th January 2011, 05:33
I do not support the IRA's tactic, I consider them a dead end. However they have actually carried a struggle against Imperialism since they are part of an oppressed nationality. Were as the Zapatistas are anything but a treat to the rule of capital, which is why even the PRI used against the reformist Obrador movement which actually did threaten the bourgeoisie and the US Imperialists interests, more than this "Anticapitalist" EZLN have.

freepalestine
8th January 2011, 06:00
I'm concerned about the Zapatistas being able to defend against the state if it attacks directly.are other groups such as EPR still active in south mexico?

FreeFocus
8th January 2011, 06:24
are other groups such as EPR still active in south mexico?

Yeah, to some extent. Apparently there's some speculation that they might be reorganizing, but realistically they aren't a serious threat. The same goes for any other small guerrilla groups in the region.

What's crazy is how the terrorist drug cartels are just wreaking havoc in Mexico. It's a narco-state, and a lot of innocent, mostly working class, people are being killed over this bullshit.

Os Cangaceiros
8th January 2011, 09:04
I think that the mexican state won't attack until its sure it can handle the backlash at home. I think thats the main thing preventing the tanks from rolling in.

Why would the tanks be rolling in? Mexico has nothing to gain from "sending in the tanks". The resistance in Chiapas (if it can really be called that at this point) hasn't represented a serious challenge to the state for quite some time now (the EZLN is far from the most significant threat that has arose from the region, too...militant groups managed to Chiapas semi-autonomous for a long time during the 19th century). The EZLN is an object of admiration by sympathetic gringos rather than group with real teeth. Although that's not to say that even if they had "real teeth" that they would be valuable to the anti-capitalist cause...one only needs to look at The Shining Path or (closer to home) modern-day drug cartels to realize that. I don't think much can be gained from what the EZLN promotes.

That's not to say that indigenous struggles in Chiapas (and Central America more generally) isn't a worthwhile project, because I think it is.

costello1977
8th January 2011, 12:54
I do not support the IRA's tactic, I consider them a dead end. However they have actually carried a struggle against Imperialism since they are part of an oppressed nationality. Were as the Zapatistas are anything but a treat to the rule of capital, which is why even the PRI used against the reformist Obrador movement which actually did threaten the bourgeoisie and the US Imperialists interests, more than this "Anticapitalist" EZLN have.

I believe that the ELZN are reformist personally.