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April 11, 1999
1000's of Zapatistas recover San Andres
(This morning, April 8, 1999, thousands of zapatista sympathizers from
Los Altos in Chiapas demonstrated in San Andres Sakamch'en de los Pobres
and recovered the Presidential office of the Autonomous Municipality.)
DEMONSTRATION OF 3000 INDIGENOUS IN SAN ANDRES
4/8/99
Jesus Ramirez
San Andres Sacamach'en, Chiapas.
More than 3000 tzotzil zapatistas peacefully re-took the council facilities
that the chiapaneco government had snatched 24 hours ago. In a large demonstration,
the Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN) indigenous sympathizers
reaffirmed that they are in the majority in this municipality.
Yesterday, the state government tried to forcefully establish a local
government that had not secured the support of the people, in spite of
their having promoted division and the buying of consciences with public
monies. Nor could it be accomplished through threats by paramilitaries,
soldiers and police officers against the indigenous rebels.
San Andres is one of the hearts of zapatismo. The tzotiles who marched
today demonstrated that. In a political act they re-established the autonomia
authorities who will be attending to the communities in the recovered
offices.
Benjamin, speaking for the reunited peoples, warned: "we want peace,
a peace with justice and dignity. We do not want confrontation between
brothers, and because of that, if the government returns with their police
in order to dislocate us, we will withdraw in order to avoid a confrontation,
but we will continue protesting the arbitrary acitons of governor Albores."
"This action was a decision made by the people, and the people are giving
possession to the true San Andres authorities again," Jacinto summed up,
before noting that the communities would be setting up guards in order
to protect the Autonomous Municipality.
The zapatistas made one thing clear during the march: "PRI brothers,
you are not our enemy." Later, during a message read at the rally, they
added: "what they have done by dislocating the peoples' authorities is
a true provocation, if something serious occurs in the municipality, you
will be directly responsible, along with the assassin government."
Hundreds of men, women and children from the different communities in
the municipality began gathering together this morning at the three access
points to this old city. The 13th Infantry Battery withdrew their control
point a little later in response to the massive presence of the indigenous.
At noon, in three simultaneous marches, hundreds of indigenous - with
their faces covered with scarves and ski-masks - walked through the main
roads of the town and headed through the plaza to the municipal building
in question.
In the midst of slogans against the presence of the Army and the police,
chanting "viva's" to the EZLN and to Subcomandante Marcos, the indigenous
formed a single column, filled the plaza and occupied the offices recently
used by the PRI council that ordered them to paint the walls.
Next to the municipal president's office, two trucks and a van from the
Public Security police remained parked, full of officers from that body,
armed with tear gas and R-15 rifles. They found themselves surrounded
by hundreds of indigenous who began to demand their withdrawal. The police
commander in charge talked with the zapatista representatives, and, in
response to pressure from the people, decided to remove themselves at
full speed towards the outskirts of town. The euphoric indigenous shouted
at them, and some of them threw trash at them. With thunderous applause,
the crowd celebrated the symbolic departure of the police.
They then proceeded to occupy the building, and they held a sit-in. "We
have come to demonstrate our strong protest and repudiation of the dirty
and shameful action of Roberto Albores, the imposed governor of Chiapas,
for having dislocated our authorities, democratically elected by the majority,"
said Benjamin, who was wearing a black woolen ski-mask.
Two authorities, two paths, two realities. The autonomia authorities
gave the reunited people possession, and, through security commisisons,
that town protected them. In contrast, yesterday the government gave possession
to the constitutional government with a smaller group of townspeople and
more than 3000 police.
As a poples' revenge, the zapatistas took down the picture of the chiapaneco
governor, along with two other former governors, and they broke them and
burned them in front of the people. They thus did away with the only government
act that the PRI council had performed: hanging the photograph of the
interim of the interim governor of Chiapas.
The 12 Autonomous Municipalities of Los Altos region read a message that
noted: Albores does not tire of promoting and provoking violence and confrontation
in order to spill more indigenous blood in Chiapas. Nonetheless, he is
still trying to conceal his crimes and his evilness, speaking of peace
and of the well- being of the indigenous peoples."
"In the name of law and order he incarcerates and assassinates indigenous
and campesinos, in the name of peace and justice he seeks violence and
confrontations among the indigenous," Benjamin read in front of those
who were present.
The zapatistas sent a message to Albores, considered by the residents
of San Andres to be a "criminal" the bloodiest in the history of Chiapas:"
"the just struggle of the indigenous peoples cannot be stopped by the
dictatorship and arrogance of an assassin government."
"The indigenous peoples who are conscience and who are willing to struggle
are not going to be discouraged or surrender because of threats, and even
less by the taking away of a building or by invading a piece of space;
because their just struggle is not enclosed by four walls, nor does it
have borders, because their cause is justice, liberty, democracy, and
peace with justice and liberty."
"Albores is not satisfied with having assassinated dozens of indigenous
and hundreds of innocents; if justice existed in Mexico, Albores, like
others, would no longer be free, provoking more violence, he should be
in jail for the multiple crimes he has committed against the indigenous
peoples," Benjamin concluded.
Source details:-
Originally published in Spanish by Enlace Civil A.C.
enlacecivil@laneta.apc.org
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Translated by irlandesa
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last updated: January 30, 2005
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