Our main concern in writing to you at this time, is to
present some important points and questions that we are hoping you will
consider regarding the invitation extended by the Council to Gustavo
Iruegas of Mexico’s Partido de la Revolución Democrática (PRD) to speak
at the August 19th teach-in, and the Council’s presentation of Iruegas
as a representative of the “legitimate government of Mexicoâ€.
Though
we are voicing these concerns only days before Iruegas will be speaking
in Ottawa, we hope that the urgency and importance of the various
issues that surround Iruegas and the PRD will be taken into
consideration in the dialogue that Council members and participants may
have with him. These are concerns that arise from not only our analysis
of the political and social situation in Mexico, but also concretely
from the on-going work, dialogue and solidarity that we share with
Mexican allies both in Mexico and in Canada.
Though
allies from Mexico will generally not have a presence in Montebello,
the devastating consequences that the SPP will dictate for Mexicans
also demands that we seriously consider the voice of the vast amount of
progressive grassroots groups and organizers who have spoken out
against the actions of the PRD, Iruegas specifically, and any claims to
a “legitimate†Mexican government.
Many examples, both past and
current, make evident the political line of the PRD, which though it
claims to be a progressive political party inclined towards Mexico’s
poor, has served to entrench neo-liberalism, state violence,
militarization and poverty across the country. In fact, amongst others,
various Indigenous, campesino and student groups in Mexico have stated
that the PRD in many areas of the country has carried out actions more
reprehensible than were ever witnessed under the well-known
dictatorial, right-wing rule of the Partido Revolucionario
Institucionál (PRI).
In the state of Guerrero, where PRD
Governor Zeferino Torreblanca Galindo has been in power since 2005, the
Indigenous communities who have been actively resisting the PRD-backed
plans for what will be the largest hydro-electric dam in Mexico, La
Parota, have faced an intense government sanctioned attack in the form
of paramilitary intimidation, political arrests and murders. La Parota
is expected to result in the flooding of 17,000 hectares of land, the
expropriation of the land of 25,000 campesinos and to indirectly affect
another 70,000 due to the resulting environmental destruction. Despite
clear objection from the local communities, as exhibited in a popular
assembly carried out recently by the Council of Ejidos and Communities
Opposed to the Parota Dam (CECOP) where residents of the affected area
unanimously voted against the project, Zeferino, the PRD and its leader
Andrés Manuel López Obrador have continued to push for the project,
claiming that it is necessary for the development of the area. It is
however clear, as Members of CECOP have asserted, that the project will
only serve to
further develop the encroaching tourist zones in the state.
La
Parota falls in with larger plans of neo-liberal development, known as
the Plan Puebla Panama (PPP), a complex of transportation routes and
accompanying industrial development, set to link Mexico to Central
America which will ravage the Mexican country-side and further the
displacement that those of us opposed to the SPP are denouncing as a
grave human rights violation. During his term with Vicente Fox’s
Partido Acción Nacional (PAN), Gustavo Iruegas worked actively to
further plans for the PPP, ignoring the voices of those opposed to the
same policies that we will be opposing in Montebello next week.
In
the state of Chiapas, various human rights organizations such as the
Human Rights Centre Fray Bartolomé de las Casas, as well as reporters
with the independent media and well known paper La Jornada, have
denounced the actions of the military and state police, controlled by
PRD governor Juan Sabines. Sabines’ actions have been identified as
being aimed at bringing the Mexican military into the Zapatista
territories of Chiapas. López Obrador has maintained complete silence
on the issues.
Another well known example of the PRD’s
complicity in the repression of various marginalized sectors of the
Mexican population, were its actions against the people of San Salvador
Atenco in May of 2006. The PRD Mayor of Texcoco, Nazario Gutiérrez, was
directly responsible for breaking accords with the Peoples Front in
Defense of the Land (FPDT) and sending in police forces to forcefully
remove flower vendors. The police’s actions in Atenco resulted in two
deaths, the rapes and sexual assaults of dozens of women and the
imprisonment of hundreds of children, women, men and elders. There are
still political prisoners from Atenco, over a year after the police’s
violent actions.
During his term as Mexico City’s Mayor, López
Obrador, who purports to uphold the interests of Mexico’s poor,
gentrified many areas of the city, privatized the water system and
Mexico’s historic centre and implemented a repressive “zero toleranceâ€
security policy.
Finally, we need to address the actions of Gustavo
Iruegas, who notably has also served with the PRI. We would like to
share with you words from a communiqué sent out by the Zapatista Army
of National Liberation (EZLN)'s Subcomandante Marcos on January 1, 1999
addressing the actions of various politicians and parties involved in
the massacres of, threats and attacks against the Indigenous
communities of Chiapas. As you are all aware, the Zapatistas have been
one of the major grassroots Indigenous-led movements in Mexico,
fighting against neo-liberal policies represented by agreements such as
NAFTA and the SPP. In 1999, Marcos directly referred to Iruegas’
actions by saying that he was one of the various “names that government
hypocrisy has held… None of them [politicians including Iruegas] has
had the valor of, knowing they were being used by the war [dirty war
being waged against the Indigenous Zapatista communities], refusing to
be complicit in the assassinations that are the sole products of the
government in the conflict of the Mexican southeast.â€
In a
communiqué from February 2007 in which Marcos describes the Zapatistas'
reasons for criticizing the PRD, he goes on to say that Iruegas is “one
of the architects of the Acteal massacre [massacre at the hands of the
PRI government and paramilitaries in 1997 in Acteal, Chiapas which
resulted in the murders of 45 women and men who were attending a prayer
meeting], an apologist for the strategy (which has failed, of course)
that 'you have to strike the EZLN to get them to dialogue', one of the
'I don’t see you, I don’t hear you' of the governmental delegation at
the Democracy Table in San Andrés [San Andrés accords of 1996 through
which the EZLN attempted to reach an agreement with the Mexican
government on the issues of Indigenous social, political and economic
rights. Despite signing during the first phase of the accords, the
government continued with its military and paramilitary attacks on
Zapatista communities resulting in a breaking off of the negotiations,
and never agreed to the Zapatistas' conditions for the continuation of
dialogue.], the very same one [Irruegas] that said that the PRI would
never leave power and that the Zapatistas should "start getting used to
that fact…"
It is clear that Iruegas, irrespective of
the political party he has served under, has been complicit in the
exact politics and attacks against communities that we are coming
together as a movement to protest in Montebello.
Presenting the PRD by its self-given title – “The legitimate
government of Mexicoâ€, and reinforcing this, ignores on the one hand, a
vast section of the Mexican left, from various political backgrounds,
that continues to contest the legitimacy of the Mexican electoral
process as it exists and on the other hand, the neo-liberal,
anti-Indigenous, anti-campesino, anti-worker, anti-women and anti-poor
policies that the PRD, its current leader Andrés Manuel Lopez Obradór
and politicians such as Iruegas have been responsible for in various
areas of Mexico for years.
It is thus, as a network of groups
struggling for a full measure of justice and dignity for oppressed
peoples – the vision that our opposition to the SPP is rooted within –
and our solidarity with our allies and marginalized peoples in Mexico
that we ask you to consider these facts about Gustavo Iruegas and the
political party he will be representing when he comes to Ottawa on
August 19th. Respectfully, we put forth that:
- a withdrawal of
the invitation would be the clearest indication of what we hope will be
collective indignation on the part of our allies in the Council at the
actions of Iruegas and the PRD
- if this
is not possible, we do hope that concrete questions can be asked of
Iruegas by Council members and teach-in participants regarding these
actions to hold him accountable for these violations of the peoples of
Mexico.
Thank you.
In Solidarity,
PGA Bloc Montreal