June 24, 2006

Latest developments in oaxaca

by tataanka
Since last wednesday's brutal police assault in oaxaca, a social movement has been growing which is on the verge of being revolutionary

The week following the early morning police assault on the 14th, the maestros and supporters occupied the zocalo only from the hours of 8 AM to 8 PM. However, they have been doing other things. Tuesday marked their statewide assembly, which I don't have aq huge amount of information on, other than that they've decided to make decisions by taking a vote. Since the beginning of the maestros planton, many other social groups have been involved helping out, and promoting their interests. Saturday was the first Oaxacan Popular Assembly, a meeting of many of the more radical folks who have been helping out, as well as more mainstream folks trying to get a neck in on the action.

OPA is an effort to build a unified opposition to Oaxacan Governor Ulises Ruiz Ortiz and the PRI, who ordered the bloody police attack. Present at the meeting were folks from the PRD (Democratic Revolutionary Party,) two socialist parties, the electricians union, the telephone union, social security union, The university facvulty of architecture and language, as well as several radical social justice groups based in the pueblos, such as the anarchist CIPO-RFM, and the socialist groups CODEP and OIDHO. All in all a total of 376 folks showed up at their first meeting, and ,deciding to make their decisions by concensus, they agreed on a document demanding for the immediate destitution of Ulises Ruiz Ortiz. It should be noted that these folks overlap some, because many of the members of the radical social justice groups happen to be maestros as well, and are constantly pushing from the inside to radicalize things.

Wednesday Ulises Ruiz Ortiz organized a march "in defense of education," the local paper reported that it arrived with "french perfume and the smell of onions," commenting on the fact that while some of Ulises`upper class followers made it there, a large number of the marchers were hired campesinos. Even while paying them, he still managed to garner less than ten thousand folks.

While many of the maestros have been scared away from returning to the zocalo, the social justice groups have been filling in their gaps, and wednesday also marked the first day returned to 24 hr occupation. The campesinos, activists, and teachers have built huge barricades on the streets surrounding the zocalo, have rocks and sticks piled up for the impending attack, and are busy building unity on the inside. The army has troops stationed in a part of the town called the cinco seƱores, and when a report was issued that they were mobilizing this aftyernoon, the people here quickly commandeered buses and set up blockades, gathering at the perimeters to meet the oppressors. It turned out to be a false alarm, but it shows that they are prepared.

There have also been marches in the towns outside of oaxaca city, and yesterday a group of maestros blocked the highway on the isthmus of tehuantepec for a number of hours, burning a bus in the action.

All of these things point to a growing social movement within Oaxaca that is on the verge of being revolutionary. I saw a poster yestyerday that said "Ulises Ruiz Ortiz, the only governer able to unite all of the people of Oaxaca, but AGAINST him." With a little more time, some serious struggle and hope, things may end up truly changed and truly better, here.

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