ricardo dominguez on 3 Jul 2000 16:23:25 -0000 |
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Re: <nettime> Elections in Conflict Zone Under State of Exception (Chiapas, Mex) |
Originally published in Spanish by La Jornada _______________________ Translated by irlandesa La Jornada Sunday, July 2, 2000. Elections in Conflict Zone Under State of Exception Four Chiapaneco Districts Completely Militarized Hermann Bellinghausen, correspondent. San Cristo'bal de Las Casas, Chiapas. The elections in Chiapas, at least in the indigenous municipalities of the so-called "conflict zone," will be held under a state of exception, despite attempts by the election propaganda to conceal the fact. Of the 12 electoral districts in the state, four are totally militarized and subjected to State patronage and the low intensity war. Districts 1, 3, 5 and 8 (Palenque, Ocosingo, San Cristo'bal de las Casas and Comita'n, respectively) take in dozens of existing indigenous municipalities, constitutional as well as autonomias, in addition to those imposed by Governor Roberto Albores. Los Altos, the Northern region, the Selva Lacandona in its entirety, and the Border region, areas inhabited primarily by Tzotziles, Tzeltales, Tojolabales and Choles, take in a third of the chiapaneco population. In the unfortunate municipality of Ocosingo alone there are 38 federal Army operations bases, which determine the daily existence of 25 of the electoral district's sections. There are another 10 army bases and camps in Las Margaritas, directly affecting other electoral sections, according to reports by District 3 opposition parties. The Northern region, which includes Simojovel, Tila, Tumbala', Sabanilla, Salto de Agua, Palenque, El Bosque, Huitiupa'n, Chilo'n and Yajalo'n, has been subjected of late to diverse pressures which are seriously affecting the so-called social peace. Curiously, all the conflicts have been provoked by PRI bases, in confrontation with each other over government assistance money, over each group's responsibilities with the civilian armed groups being investigated by the PGR now, and over participation in the cultivation and trafficking in drugs. The entire Northern region, like Los Altos, is practically occupied by the Federal Army, which has important operations bases in San Andre's, Chenalho', Pantelho', Chalchihuita'n and San Cristo'bal de Las Casas, in addition to the municipalities already noted. A large number of the polling booths are located in barracks. Several thousand voters will be coming out of San Quinti'n, Guadalupe Tepeyac, Tonina', Montes Azules, San Andre's, Majomut and Rancho Nuevo. Various observers and journalists have calculated that there are around 200 military settlements in the conflict zone, which would have from 35 to 60,000 troops. Parsimonious official estimates do not go above 15,000, including the troops in Tabasco. The armed forces will remain in their barracks until Monday, when they will once again control and patrol the highways and roads of the indigenous lands. Meanwhile, state police will be taking over "strategic points," announced state Attorney General Eduardo Montoya Lie'vano. Except for Chiapas, he stated, the Army will be in charge of election day security. In this state "it will be the state police, because of the delicacy of the situation, so that they cannot go and interpret that the military's presence is in order to inhibit voting, especially in the indigenous areas." The situation is so exceptional that the troops will remain in their barracks here. Because, in Chiapas, above all (but not only in Chiapas), the troops are usually outside their barracks (in addition to the fact that many barracks and camps are located inside the communities, or on their ejidal lands, making the border between "inside" and "outside" the barracks rather vague). PRI Turmoil At the last moment, official party organizations involved with armed groups and violent activities have entered into crisis, escaping from the control of the state government. The most serious case was El Bosque, where - in a still unclarified ambush - seven police officers were assassinated by a paramilitary commando group. Investigations by the PGR have pointed out PRI activists as being responsible. They, in turn, have accused their accusers, also pro-government, with ties to the municipal president. Another PRI attempt at rebellion occurred this week when a group that had been expelled from Peace and Justice, in the Northern region, occupied several mayor's offices and raised demands, primarily economic. Peace and Justice separated itself from these actions yesterday, in which the dissidents "refused to recognize" interim governor Roberto Albores for 24 hours. Taking advantage of the moment, the organization - noted as paramilitary on repeated occasions, and, which, in fact, controls by force access to the Chol area - appealed to the Federation Comptroller's office. They stated that the Peace and Justice bases "have not received any kind of programs. For that reason we are demanding that appropriate investigations be made in order to separate our organization from the alleged aid." The president of Peace and Justice, Cristo'bal Go'mez Torres, stated yesterday that the 4,600,000 pesos which the state government authorized in 1997 through an economic development program in benefit of its bases, never reached the communities. Professing institutional loyalty, the organization declared: "We have not planned any violent actions or confrontations with those who were expelled by the decision of our bases." They announced they would not be interfering with the election. A few hours before the election, PRI organizations associated with paramilitarization are continuing the fight to reap profit from their corporate vote. # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net