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Re: LA to Oaxaca: state sponsored war on the poor
- To: ca-resisters@interversity.org
- Subject: Re: LA to Oaxaca: state sponsored war on the poor
- From: Susan Harman <susanharman@igc.org>
- Date: Sun, 18 Jun 2006 19:37:40 -0700
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- In-reply-to: <C0BB32A3.11A59%langlois-rine@comcast.net>
Marilyn—
Were going through our own little eve of destruction at Growing
Children. As you know, the Oakland dictator closed us. Im trying to
find somebody to sublet our space so we dont have to bulldoze it. What
East Oakland really needs is another empty lot. Like what LA really
needs is another warehouse.
Richs predictions of fascism are coming true.
Susan
Begin forwarded message:
From: Marilyn Langlois <langlois-rine@comcast.net>
Date: Sun Jun 18, 2006 4:41:07 PM US/Pacific
To: <ca-resisters@interversity.org>
Subject: [ca-resisters] LA to Oaxaca: state sponsored war on the poor
Reply-To: ca-resisters@interversity.org
The pre-dawn police action in Oaxaca on June 14 was foreshadowed by
events in Los Angeles the day before.
At 5 am on June 13, LA police and sheriffs in riot gear with
helicopters and bulldozers stormed the South Central Farm, destroying
parts of it and evicting and arresting local residents and activists
who were trying to protect this 14-acre Mesoamerican paradise in the
heart of LA.
I had had an opportunity to visit the farm a week earlier and was
delighted by the opulent fruits, vegetables, flowers and herbs
thriving there, the welcoming community, delicious food. I rested and
made new acquaintances under the shade of the magnificent walnut tree,
was uplifted by the spiritual power of Aztec dancers and drummers.
Susan Harman, you are such a gardener, you would love this place.
Joe Navarro, the essence of your poetry would resonate there.
Now this oasis faces destruction, yet the supporters continue to vigil
round the clock on the street. For info and updates:
http://www.southcentralfarmers.org/
http://www.southcentralfarmers.com/
http://www.la.indymedia.org/
peace and blessings,
Marilyn
From: Rich Gibson <rgibson@pipeline.com>
Reply-To: ca-resisters@interversity.org
Date: Wed, 14 Jun 2006 19:52:36 -0700
To: ca-resisters@interversity.org
Subject: [ca-resisters] Fwd: Oaxaca Under Siege
From: David Riker <riker@igc.org (forwarded through Monty Neil)
Dear Friends,
I'm writing about the situation in Oaxaca. As I write, the capital
city is under siege. At approximately 5AM this morning the state
police attacked the teachers occupation of the city center. Though
reports are sketchy, it seems that three teachers have been killed, as
well as a young girl. The teachers have taken three or four police
hostage. A raging battle is underway to control the zocalo, the center
of life in Oaxaca, and the heart of the teacher's encampment. In the
dawn raid the teachers were forced out, but the local paper, Noticias
de Oaxaca, has reported that at 9:30AM local time the teachers, armed
with rocks and sticks, re-took the main square. Police are firing tear
gas from helicopters right now. Thousands (tens of thousands) of
people are involved in running battles in the streets. And there is
the fear that upwards of 3500 federal riot police -- deployed to
Oaxaca in the last two weeks by Vicente Fox -- are about to enter the
city.
I've just gotten off the phone with friends in the center. They
described the scene on the streets this morning at about 7:30AM.
Hundreds of people crying from the mix of tear gas, smoke bombs and
some other pepper spray. The men forming groups to launch the assault
to retake the zocalo. Mothers telling their boys to take care of
themselves as they fell into line. From the rooftops of the single
story houses you can watch the helicopters flying overhead shelling
tear gas canisters into the crowds. There is a heavy fear, but also, I
was tol, you could hear the sound of people marching and singing.
As a brief background, you might want to read:
http://www.narconews.com/Issue41/article1874.html
The teachers occupation of the city, known in Spanish as a 'planton'
began 23 days ago. More than 80,000 teachers from every municipality
in the state had converged on the capital to press a list of demands
for more resources for education. They have had two mass marches, the
most recent bringing more than 120,000 people out, the largest
demonstration in the city's history. The planton has become an annual
event since more than a decade, and I will never forget last year's
planton which happened while I was still living there. For about ten
days the teachers occupied the entire center of town, sleeping on the
streets under tarpaulins stretched overhead. They were extremely well
organized and the city center was never more alive. The teachers and
their families would cook large meals on open fires, play guitar and
sing, rest on folded cardboard in the shade. They set up their radio
station "Radio Planton" and played music on loud speakers. There were
first aid tents, propaganda tents, mass meetings on every corner.
This year, many have remarked that the planton, and the teachers'
mobilization generally, has been different. The question is: If the
teachers brought 80,000 to the city, who are the other 40,000? I'm not
close enough to give a good answer, but what I understand is that the
teachers have offered an opening which hundreds of small community
groups and social justice centers from around the state have chosen to
follow. The past two years under the new PRI governor Ulises Ruis has
intensified the level of state repression. Scores of activists in
small villages have been killed, hundreds arrested and still in jail
as political prisoners. The spike in repression was so great that
Amnesty International sent a delegation to Oaxaca in May of 2005 to
investigate. It appears that when the teachers marched on the capital
three weeks ago they were joined by tens of thousands of others from
the villages in what is becoming a broad movement to depose the
governor. Ruis has refused to meet with the teachers, and has managed
to pull in his party's promisary notes to about half of the state's
municipal mayors who signed a decree condemning the teachers action.
But there is a palpable sense that the social movements are converging
and that something new is underway.
During the past three weeks, the movement has shown a great level of
strength and creativity -- occupying the city's airport, smashing the
newly-installed parking meters throughout the city center, occupying
the toll booths on the main road from Oaxaca to Mexico City -- not to
stop the cars, only to stop the collecting of tolls, and the very fact
that they have occupied the zocalo has great significance as the new
governor, after spending upwards of $100 million to 'beautify' the
zocalo, decreed that it was now off-limits for any demonstrations.
Three nights ago, Ruis met with business leaders at a late night
gathering and promised to use the 'mano dura' or hard hand. There were
reports that the first 1500 federal riot police were camped in the
nearby town of Tlacolula. This morning the governor appears to have
proven himself a man of his word. Some reports have said that the tear
gas in the city center is so thick you can't see the hand in front of
you.
I have not seen any reports in the US media, BBC etc. There is some
information on indymedia's Mexico site, some more on the online
version of Noticias de Oaxaca -- both in Spanish.
(http://www.noticias-oax.com.mx/) I know that the police have shut
down the teachers' radio station 'Radio Planton' but as of 12:00 noon
Oaxaca time the students' radio station 'Radio Universitario' was
still broadcasting and "you can hear the broadcast from every window
and door in town." The students themselves have occupied the
university, but the latest reports suggest that the police are heading
there now.
I'm writing this in the hope that you can help spread the word, and
alert others in the network of media to turn their attention to the
struggle ongoing.
In solidarity,
David
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