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Chiapas Rebellion: Protest Letters

To the State Governor of Chiapas, Lic. Roberto Albores Guillèn
Fax: + 52 961 2 0917

Dear Governor,

At approximately 5 pm on April the 15th about 800 police and soldiers entered the community of Diez de Abril.

Josè Alfredo López Mèndez, 17 (a minor), was arrested and savagely beaten, dragged and stripped while being taken by the police to their vehicles. When he appealed to others from the community for help, one of the police put the barrel of a gun in his mouth, thus forcing him to remain silent.

The mother of the boy and the women of the community tried to rescue him but they were driven back by shoves and blows from the Public Security police.

Three Norwegians from the civilian peace camp were arrested.

Having overcome the resistance offered by the people of the village, the police split up and, without warrants, began to break into the houses, destroying and robbing the belongings of each family.

While running away, a five year old child fell from a rope suspension bridge into the river. She has still not been found.

They set one house on fire and partially burnt it, cut the community's electricity supply cables, sacked the women's cooperative shop, took medical instruments, books and seven boxes of medicines from the clinic and seized 5 000 pesos which had been donated to the community church.

In the face of these events, the community of Diez de Abril and we demand:

1. The immediate release of Josè Alfredo López Mèndez, who is imprisoned.

2. Full investigation and punishment of those responsible for both the carrying out and the planning of these events.

3. Payment and compensation for the goods taken and destroyed.

4. An end to the reression of indigenous communities.

5. That the rights of the indigenous peoples be respected.

6. The complete implementation of the San AndrÈs Peace Agreements.

Yours faithfully,

The Latin America Solidarity Centre (LASC)

This is an initiative for cultural promotion, development education and campaigning solidarity, linking Ireland and Latin America.

Please fax letter to the governor as soon as possible.

LASC 5 Merrion Row, Dublin 2, Ireland

Phone: +353-1-6760435
Fax: +353-1-6621784

STOP THE GENOCIDE IN CHIAPAS

AN OPEN LETTER TO KOFI ANNAN,
SECRETARY GENERAL OF THE UNITED NATIONS

Appeal to the World For Chiapas

Synopsis: The International community failed to act in a timely and decisive fashion to prevent massive genocide in Rwanda and Bosnia. Now, massive violence and intimidation is being directed at Indigenous people in Chiapas, Mexico. We call on the UN to act IMMEDIATELY, with armed intervention if necessary, to end the repression and prevent genocide in Chiapas. We also call on all Mexican soldiers and police to refuse to obey any illegal order which contravenes Mexican law or which violates International standards regarding human rights and genocide.

This is an urgent appeal to the United Nations, and the world community, to stop the growing violence, intimidation, and repression now directed against the millions of Indigenous people of Chiapas, Mexico.

President Clinton has publicly acknowledged the failure of the world community to act in a timely and decisive manner to halt the genocide in Rwanda. "(We) did not fully appreciate the depth and the speed with which (Rwandans) were being engulfed by this unimaginable horror," he has said. "We did not act quickly enough after the killing began. We did not immediately call these crimes by their rightful name: genocide."

The world failed in Rwanda.

In Bosnia, the genocide against Moslems was also allowed to proceed relatively unhindered for years, and as a result massive numbers of people were killed.

The world failed in Bosnia.

Now, in Chiapas, massive numbers of civilians are again at risk of genocidal action - this time by civilian paramilitary groups, and by elements of the Mexican military itself, who are targeting the 4-5 million Indigenous peoples of the southernmost state of Mexico.

The most horrific single incident to date took place last December 22 at the little town of Acteal, where forty-five unarmed Indigenous civilians - most of them women and children - were systematically hunted down like animals and murdered by paramilitary forces.

It must be made clear that Acteal is not an isolated incident. It is emblematic of a much broader pattern of escalating violence and intimidation aimed at the Indigenous people of Chiapas. In the past 18 months, there has been a growing pattern of paramilitary violence, and more recently growing military violence, which has: claimed hundreds of lives; converted thousands of Indigenous people into homeless refugees; destroyed Indigenous crops by vandalism, theft, and burning; and produced in recent months a major repressive buildup of Mexican military forces in the region.

Most recently, raids by massed bodies of hundreds and even thousands of government troops and police have unlawfully descended on peaceful Indigenous communities. These raids have brutalized and arrested dozens of members of peaceful Indigenous cooperative economic and political associations. These raids have also illegally arrested dozens of International peace observers, whose presence had been requested by the Indigenous people and their organizations to insure the safety of the Indigenous. These peace observers have been summarily deported from the country without due process of law, thereby depriving the Indigenous people of outside witnesses should further acts of violence and intimidation occur.

On the basis of these developments, the UN, Amnesty International, and many other respected international human rights organizations have found very serious violations of both Mexican legality and Human rights.

In addition, an all-out assault on various civilian Indigenous communities, and on the Zapatista Indigenous Army, which has engaged in no warfare activities for 3 1/2 years, appears to be under preparation. The cost of such an assault in lives is incalculable.

In light of all these developments, we want to issue a challenge to all the governments of the Americas, to the United Nations, and to all world leaders:

Let us not fail again.

Another slaughter has already begun,
and a still more massive slaughter looms.

There is no time to waste. Timely and decisive action must be taken immediately to avert further repression and genocide directed at Indigenous people, people who have historically been subjected to the greatest genocide and have been the most oppressed in the Americas.

Indigenous Peoples' Literature Return to Indigenous Peoples' Literature

Compiled by: Glenn Welker
ghwelker@gmx.com

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