Oaxaca, Mexico: report, photo, prisoner lists

Detenidos 28 de noviembre
1.SOSA VILLAVICENCIO Erick (hermano de Flavio Sosa)

Detenidos 27 de noviembre
1.CILIA OCAMPO Alberto Tlacael (21 años)(ENAH)
2.ILICH WELDON Mille Sarah (22 años)(ciudadana francesa)
3.RODRIGUEZ CAMARENA Edgar Omar (28 años)(ENAH)

Trasladados a San Antonio de la Cal

Detenidos 26 de noviembre (barricada de 5 señores)
Penal de Etla
Robo y asociación delictuosa
Averiguación Previa 396(II)2006

1.BAUTISTA HERNÁNDEZ Luis
2.BAUTISTA MANZO Salvador
3.BERNAL PÉREZ Víctor Hugo
4.GARCÍA MARTÍNEZ Crispín
5.HERNÁNDEZ ARÁOSLA Juana Elena
6.HERNÁNDEZ BARRAGÁN Oscár
7.LAUREANO HERNÁNDEZ Germán
8.LÓPEZ CHÁVEZ Román Antonio
9.LÓPEZ MÉNDEZ Luis
10.LÓPEZ SÁNCHEZ Javier
11.MARTÍNEZ ALVAREZ Ramón
12.MARTÍNEZ GIL José Luis
13.MARTÍNEZ JUÁREZ Carlos
14.MARTÍNEZ MÉNDEZ Jorge
15.MARTÍNEZ PEÑA Gerardo
16.MAYORAL PÉREZ José Luis
17.MERIVA CORTÉS José Luis
18.PEÑA CISNEROS Diego Osvaldo
19.PÉREZ GUILLÉN José Alejandro
20.PÉREZ MÉNDEZ Francisco Javier
21.PÉREZ MORA Juan
22.RODRÍGUEZ RAMOS Mayra
23.SÁNCHEZ AGUILAR Noél
24.VÁSQUEZ MARTÍNEZ Manuel

Menores detenidos enviados al Consejo Tutelar:
25.GARCÍA MARTÍNEZ Crispín (16 años)
26.HERNÁNDEZ PIÑA CISNEROS Diego o PÉREZ CISNEROS Diego Osvaldo (14 años)
27.PÉREZ MÉNDEZ Francisco Javier (16 años)
28.PÉREZ MORA Juan (15 años)

LISTA DE PRESOS DEL DÍA 25 DE NOVIEMBRE
Las siguientes personas fueron trasladados al Cefereso #4 “Noroeste” antes "El Rinconcito" en Nayarit:

1.ABAD POBRETE Oscar Marcelo
2.AGUILAR SÁNCHEZ Rosalba (maestra de la Región Mixe)
3.ALONSO PALOMEC Giovani
4.ALVAREZ RAMÍREZ Javier
5.AQUINO SILVA Marco Antonio
6.ARAGÓN PERALTA Florinda
7.BAÑOS FLORES Adán
8.BAUTISTA CRUZ Eusebio
9.BAUTISTA ESPINOSA Adrián
10.BAUTISTA JIMÉNEZ Wenceslao
11.BOLAÑOS SANTIAGO Jesús
12.BONILLA LEZAMA Gerardo Alberto
13.CABRERA María
14.CANTÓN Elizabeth
15.CEBOLLEDO GUTIÉRREZ Christian Marcel (UNAM)
16.CERVANTES VENTURA Kidiel
17.COCA GÓMEZ Hilda
18.COCA GÓMEZ Roque
19.COCA SORIANO Edith
20.CONTRERAS Marcela
21.CONTRERAS SANTIAGO Reynaldo
22.COPLA GÓMEZ Elia
23.CORREA OROZCO Alberto Alejandro
24.CRUZ ALARCÓN María del Socorro
25.CRUZ BAUTISTA Agustín
26.CRUZ CAMPOS César Agustín
27.CRUZ CAMPOS Edgar René
28.CRUZ Carmelo
29.CRUZ CRUZ Jesús Manuel
30.CRUZ CRUZ Lamberto Miguel
31.CRUZ MARTÍNEZ Isaías
32.DOMÍNGUEZ MARTÍNEZ Juan Carlos
33.DOMÍNGUEZ Porfirio
34.GARCÍA AGUILAR Juan
35.GARCÍA Rosen
36.GARCÍA SALAS Armando
37.GARNICA ARAGÓN Eréndira
38.GIL BAUTISTA Justino
39.GONZÁLEZ AGUILAR Salomón
40.GONZÁLEZ RODRÍGUEZ Ana
41.GUZMÁN VALDIVIESO Heladio
42.HERNÁNDEZ CRUZ Buenaventura
43.HERNÁNDEZ MARTÍNEZ Héctor
44.HERNÁNDEZ OJEDA Abisai
45.HERNÁNDEZ PACHECO Daniel
46.HERRERA FLORES Gildardo
47.HILARIO VÁSQUEZ Nicolás
48.ISLAS Jorge Armando
49.JOSÉ PÉREZ Pedro Antonio
50.JUAN SANTIAGO Andrés
51.JUÁREZ MARTÍNEZ Gerardo
52.LEGARIA RAMÍREZ Jaime
53.LEYVA Zerelio
54.LÓPEZ HERNÁNDEZ Julio Alberto
55.LÓPEZ LÓPEZ Rosario Alicia
56.LÓPEZ MORALES José
57.LÓPEZ NIÑO Reynen
58.LÓPEZ SÁNCHEZ Cornelio
59.LUIS BARRERA Gabriel
60.LUIS GALLEGOS Humberto
61.LUIS GARCÍA Teodulfo
62.LUNA LÓPEZ Alejandro
63.MACEDA BONILLA Mayra
64.MARTÍNEZ BORDILLO Jaime
65.MARTÍNEZ CANSECO Teodardo
66.MARTÍNEZ GARCÍA Miguel Ángel
67.MARTÍNEZ JIMÉNEZ Florinda (maestra de la Región Mixe)
68.MARTÍNEZ Juan
69.MARTÍNEZ LÓPEZ Rufina
70.MARTÍNEZ RAMÍREZ Blanca
71.MAZA GONZÁLEZ Miguel Ángel
72.MELCHOR CERVANTES David
73.MÉNDEZ HERNÁNDEZ Uriel Julio
74.MÉNDEZ MARTÍNEZ Juan Carlos
75.MÉNDEZ PÉREZ Martha
76.MENDOZA OLIVERA Antonio Abad
77.MENDOZA SANTIAGO Ignacio
78.MOLINA CUEVA Edgar Alejandro
79.MORALES Fortunato (maestro de la Región San Jerónimo Tecuac)
80.MORALES HERNÁNDEZ Roberto
81.MORALES PASTELÍN Eloy (maestro de la Región San Jerónimo Tecuac)
82.MORELOS TREVIÑO Gerardo Davíd
83.MORELOS TREVIÑO Rubén Elbert
84.MUÑOZ CRUZ Francisco
85.OFELIA ROBLES Esperanza
86.OLEGARIO HERNÁNDEZ Eber Ignacio
87.OREA HERNÁNDEZ ROSARIO Guadalupe
88.OROPEZA HERNÁNDEZ José Luis
89.ORTEGA GÓMEZ Julian Alejandro
90.ORTIZ BAUTISTA Bernardita
91.ORTIZ GARCÍA Filemón
92.ORTIZ ORTIZ Alejandro
93.PADILLA TODÁN Isaí
94.PEDROZA GUADARRAMA Ciro
95.PÉREZ GUTIÉRREZ María
96.PÉREZ LÓPEZ César
97.PÉREZ LÓPEZ Jorge
98.PÉREZ MARÍA Sandra (maestra de la Región Mixe)
99.PÉREZ MARTÍNEZ Jenny Araceli (maestra de la Región Mixe)
100.PÉREZ MÉNDEZ Miguel
101.PÉREZ SUÁREZ Luis
102.RAMÍREZ MATÍAS Raúl
103.RAMÍREZ MORALES José Luis
104.RAMÍREZ Paulina
105.REYES ESPINOSA Juana
106.REYES GARCÍA Rolando
107.REYES HERNÁNDEZ Hilario Jorge
108.REYES HERRERA Abraham
109.REYES MARTÍNEZ Juan
110.RODRÍGUEZ DAMIÁN Álvaro
111.RODRÍGUEZ SÁNCHEZ Risota
112.ROSALES GONZÁLEZ Jorge
113.RUIZ GARCÍA Aurora
114.SALAZAR HERNÁNDEZ Celia
115.SALONA LUJÁN Avelino
116.SÁNCHEZ CRUZ Cármen
117.SÁNCHEZ CRUZ Jovita
118.SÁNCHEZ ESTRADA Ismaél
119.SÁNCHEZ GARCÍA Jorge
120.SÁNCHEZ GÓMEZ Regino
121.SÁNCHEZ RODRÍGUEZ Felipe
122.SANTIAGO APOLINAR Jesús
123.SANTIAGO CABALLERO Benito
124.SANTIAGO OREA Gonzalo
125.SANTIAGO PÉREZ Alberto
126.SANTIAGO REYES Aurelia
127.SANTIAGO REYES Victoria Francisca
128.SANTIAGO RIVERA Avelino
129.SANTIAGO RIVERA Miguel
130.SANTOS REYES Paula
131.SILVA RODRÍGUEZ Gerardo
132.SOLANO MARTÍNEZ Pablo
133.SORIANO SANJUÁN Lourdes
134.SORIANO SANJUÁN Socorro Antonio
135.SOSA MARTÍNEZ Javier
136.SUÁREZ HERNÁNDEZ Silvia
137.TOLEDO Gilberto
138.VALDÉS ALVAREZ Jaime
139.VÁSQUEZ CRUZ Isidro
140.VÁSQUEZ GARCÍA Jairo
141.VÁSQUEZ MORENO Abel
142.VÁSQUEZ ORTIZ Severiano
143.VÁSQUEZ REYES Bladimir
144.VÁSQUEZ TORRES Rigoberto
145.VELASCO BALSEA Marcela
146.VELASCO Esmeralda
147.VELASCO FABIÁN Misaél
148.VENTURA SANTIAGO Manuel
149.ZARAGOZA CARRERA Joel (maestro de la Región Cañada)

LISTA DE DESAPARECIDOS 25 y 26 de nov

1.GOMEZ FLORENTINO Andrés
2.ARAGÓN GARCÍA Ángel Rey
3.CRUZ PÉREZ Eber
4.DÍAZ Mario
5.GONZÁLEZ ROSALES Jorge
6.HERRERA CASTRO Eduardo
7.HERRERA Cesar
8.HERRERA ESQUIVEL Julio César
9.HERRERA Jesús
10.HERRERA Marcos
11.JIMENEZ RIOS Humberto
12.JUÁREZ MARTINEZ Justino
13.LÓPEZ MORALES Jorge Eduardo
14.PACHECO VAZQUEZ Juan Andrés
15.PACHECO VÁZQUEZ Luis Javier (Estudiante UABJO)
16.PANTOJA Mercen
17.RAMONES Daniel (DF)
18.ROBLES CRUZ Ofelia Esperanza
19.RUIZ GARCÍA Sebastián
20.Sarah Ivette (FRANCESA)
21.SOSA CABALLERO Benito
22.TABLADA GALINDO Ignacio
23.VAZQUEZ HERNÁNDEZ Humberto
24.VAZQUEZ ORTIZ Donato (16 años)
25.VILLANUEVA Rosario Alicia

Below, added as attachment, is the last communique from Brad Will, Indymedia journalist, murdered in Oaxaca

Oaxaca, Mexico: report, photo, prisoner lists
Oaxaca, Mexico: report, photo, prisoner lists
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Amnesty's comment; addresses to send protest mail

MEXICO At least 149 people in detention

Following a violent confrontation between supporters of the Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca (Asamblea Popular del Pueblo de Oaxaca, APPO) and the Federal Preventive Police (Policía Federal Preventiva, PFP) in the centre of Oaxaca on 25 November, at least 149 people have been detained. Amnesty International believes that they may be at risk of torture or ill-treatment while in custody.

The violence followed a demonstration organized by APPO supporters, to protest against the presence of PFP in the city and to call for the resignation of the Governor of Oaxaca. During the clashes with the police, dozens of people were reportedly injured by stones and intoxicated by teargas. There were also several reports that some people had been shot and wounded. Dozens of cars and buses and several public buildings, including the State Superior Court (Tribunal Superior de Justicia) and a theatre, were set on fire. According to reports, groups of armed men wearing balaclavas, believed to be state police, shot at protesters and buildings and arrested scores of people, several of whom reportedly had no involvement in the demonstrations.

By the end of the day, the authorities published the names of 149 people being held in two state prisons of Tlacolula and Miahuatlán, both outside the city of Oaxaca. All detainees have reportedly been denied access to family and independent legal counsel (suspects are generally forced to rely on inadequate public defenders provided by the authorities). There are also reports that on 27 November, 141 detainees were transferred to a prison in the remote state of Nayarit. Families and human rights organizations have not been informed of the charges faced by those in detention.

BACKGROUND INFORMATION
An Amnesty International delegation recently visited the city of Oaxaca and interviewed scores of victims of human rights violations committed during the ongoing crisis in Oaxaca. The organization documented the repeated violations committed by unidentified armed groups, believed to be state and municipal police officers working in plain clothes, who make arrests without identifying themselves or explaining the reasons for arrests. The organization documented in several cases the use of incommunicado detention over several days. The organization also received credible reports that detainees had been tortured and ill-treated, primarily by state and municipal police, but also by members of the PFP.

In May 2006 teachers initiated a strike in Oaxaca state calling for improved pay and conditions, and occupied the main square and surrounding streets. An attempt by state police to forcibly evict teachers on 14 June led to a radicalization of the protest and the formation on of the Asamblea Popular del Pueblo de Oaxaca, APPO (Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca), an umbrella organization of social and political groups in support of the teachers and calling for the resignation of the state governor. As the climate of violence in the city increased, armed police in plain clothes started to arbitrarily detain protesters and were reportedly responsible for several shootings. Protesters established barricades in many neighbourhoods in late August and the security situation further declined as unidentified armed men continued to target opposition supporters in marches and on barricades. On 29 October, the PFP entered the city to restore order. The operation resulted in the death of two civilians and the detention and injury of scores of others. Many of those who have been detained during the crisis have been released reportedly as a result of political negotiations, but with no clear idea of whether they may face re-arrest at a future date.

RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send appeals to arrive as quickly as possible, in Spanish or your own language:
- calling on the authorities to ensure all those detained during protests on 25 November are allowed immediate access to families, adequate medical attention and legal counsel of their choice;
- calling for them to be either charged with a recognizably criminal offence or released immediately;
- calling on the authorities to ensure the physical and mental integrity of those in custody and to carry out immediate and impartial investigations into allegations of torture or ill-treatment;
- reminding the authorities to their duty to maintain public order while protecting the human rights of all people, and ensuring that the use of force is proportionate and necessary to confront the threat faced;
- calling for an immediate and impartial investigation into the use of armed groups, believed to be state and municipal police, operating illegally to attack and detain protesters and passers-by, and for those responsible to be held to account;
- urging the federal and state authorities to ensure that all measures taken to address the crisis in Oaxaca fully respect international human rights law, and calling for them to avoid taking action which may worsen the human rights situation.

APPEALS TO:
Minister of the Interior
Lic. Carlos Abascal Carranza
Secretario de Gobernación, Secretaría de Gobernación
Bucareli 99, 1er. piso, Col. Juárez, Delegación Cuauhtémoc, México D.F., C.P.06600, MEXICO
Fax: + 52 55 5093 3414
Salutation: Dear Minister/ Estimado Secretario de Gobernación

Minister of Public Security
Lic. Eduardo Medina Mora
Secretario de Seguridad Pública, Secretaría de Seguridad Pública
Paseo de la Reforma No.364, piso 16
Colonia Juarez, Delegación Cuahutemoc, México DF. C.P. 06600, MEXICO
Fax: +52 55 5241 8393
Salutation: Señor Secretario / Dear Minister

Governor of Oaxaca
Ulises Ruiz Ortiz
Gobernador del Estado de Oaxaca, Carretera Oaxaca - Puerto Angel, Km. 9.5
Santa María Coyotopec, C. P. 71254, Oaxaca, Oaxaca, MEXICO
Fax: + 52 951 511 6879 (if someone answers, say "me da tono de fax, por favor")
Salutation: Señor Gobernador/Dear Governor

Interior Minister of Oaxaca
Lic. Jorge Franco Vargas
Secretario General de Gobierno del Estado de Oaxaca
Constitución 519, Esq. Mártires de Tacubaya, Oaxaca, Oaxaca, MEXICO
Fax: + 52 951 132 5378
Salutation: Señor Secretario/Dear Secretary

President of the National Human Rights Commission
Dr. José Luis Soberanes Fernández
Presidente de la Comisión Nacional de Derechos Humanos (CNDH)
Periférico Sur 3469, 5º piso, Col. San Jerónimo Lídice, México D.F. 10200, MÉXICO
Fax: + 52 55 5681 7199
Salutation: Dear President / Estimado Presidente

COPIES TO:
President of the Oaxaca State Human Rights Commission
Dr. Jaime Pérez Jiménez
Presidente de la Comisión Estatal
Calle de los Derechos Humanos no. 210, Colonia América
C.P. 68050, Oaxaca, Oaxaca, México.
Fax: + 52 951 503 0220
Salutation: Dear President / Estimado Presidente

Human rights organization in Oaxaca
Red Oaxaqueña de Derechos Humanos
Calle Crespo 524 Interior 4-E, Col. Centro, Oaxaca, Oaxaca, CP. 68000, MEXICO

COPIES TO: diplomatic representatives of Mexico accredited to your country.

Dispatch from Oaxaca, 29 November

From Counterpunch
Where Murderers Still Stalk the Streets, Protected by the Police
Dispatch from Oaxaca
By ROCHELLE GAUSE

Running as fast as I can, surrounded by hundreds of others, I can hear screams behind me. Glancing back, through the darkness of night I can only differentiate between the masses running with me and the federal police by the light reflecting off their shields and face masks. They are still advancing. A hand pushes my left shoulder and I realize there are medics behind me trying to run from the police while carrying a man on a stretcher clasping a bloody cloth to his head. The medics are trying to reach the makeshift clinic that the movement set up in a building just a few feet ahead. I continue to run block after block as more people pour in from side streets. The police are obviously advancing on multiple streets simultaneously. Panic is starting to set in. Rushing through my mind are the stories I have listened too over an over in the past two weeks while interviewing those who have suffered human rights violations at the hands of the federal police; the stories of sexual assault, of beatings, of psychological torture, of death threats. A few men duck in to an alley, I follow unsure if I am escaping the danger or running directly into it. A woman and her daughter, who recognize me from the internet cafe, motion us into their home. Inside I lean against the wall and slide to the floor. Immediately I think of those who were unable to find a place to hide, of those who could not run, people of all ages had been in the streets all day. I hear gunshots.

7th Mega March Turned Confrontation

Saturday, November 25th, had begun with the 7th Megamarch. Thousands had marched from the outskirts of Santa María Coyotepec to the Oaxaca City center. It was yet another incredible showing of support for the Popular Assembly of the Peoples of Oaxaca (APPO). The march was calling for the removal of both the corrupt governor of Oaxaca, Ulises Ruiz Ortiz, and the Federal Preventative Police (PFP) who have been in Oaxaca for almost a month now. The demonstrators were a highly diverse group, including people of all ages, from various indigenous groups, unions, social organizations and rural villages. People gathered along the streets applauding as the march passed. Many handed out tangerines, water and sandwiches to the crowd.

When they arrived in the city the plan was to encircle the center square for 48 hours. This is the square where striking teachers from all over the state of Oaxaca created an encampment which led to the beginning of the movement over 6 months ago. The federal police have occupied it since they entered Oaxaca on October 29th. As the people began the circle, the police in full riot gear, refined their formation at each of the entrances backed by a police officer armed with live ammunition on top of an armoured vehicle. Although APPO had made it clear that the plan was to remain completely non-violent, within half an hour street battles broke out between the movement and the police in at least two of the entrances. Some members of the movement, armed with rocks, Molotov cocktails and fireworks, faced off with the police who used an incredible amount of tear gas, rocks and marbles shot with slingshots. Also, according to LIMEDDH, the Mexican League in Defense of Human Rights, state government backed paramilitaries were seen on the roofs of buildings helping to provoke the confrontations. Earlier in the day the radio station affiliated with Ulises political party (Institutional Revolutionary Party or PRI) had called for people to dump boiling water and acid on the demonstrators.

Federal Police Advance

After awhile the police pushed the people north up the hill, at one point taking over the Santo Domingo plaza where the movement has been centered since the police forced them out of the main square. The police continued to fire teargas into the crowd and burnt the tarps and other belongings of the movement and vendors in the Santo Domingo plaza. The report from APPO's most recent Constitutive Congress were scattered all over the ground. During this time plain clothed police were detaining people in the streets. After the police retreated back to the main square, many movement members regrouped in Santo Domingo as night was falling.

Suddenly the police advanced over eight blocks forcing the crowd to continue running north of the main square. Paramilitary groups also arrived on the scene shooting into the crowd as people ran for their lives. Movement members attempted to set up barricades, I witnessed many women scrambling to gather rocks for defense, breaking stones off the fancy plazas were Ulises has squandered the states money. Cars and government buildings were lit on fire. Throughout the next few hours federal police and plain clothed gunmen continued to attack members of the movement who had taken cover in various locations. Three movement members were killed, 39 disappeared, 149 detained, and over 140 injured (20 with live ammunition), not including the hundred people the medics assisted who were overwhelmed by the gas and pepper spray. And this is just on November 25th.

The people of Oaxaca who are facing this fate are guilty of the crime of demanding justice and trying to organize a democratic alternative to the corrupt and repressive leadership that governs their state. The Mexican federal government's response, supposedly to restore order, has instead attempted to maintain the exploitive status quo through further repression and with no regard for the true root causes of this conflict, the extreme poverty and unjust government policies that benefit a few at the cost of the majority. According to Yessica Sanchez of LIMMEDH, "It is clear that the PFP are not interested in instilling peace, what they come to do is intimidate and try to criminalize the social movement in Oaxaca." If the federal police had come to Oaxaca with the true intention of restoring order, those who have committed the violence in the last 6 months of the struggle would be brought to justice. Nowhere are movement members safe from the threat of armed attack. Members of the movement have been killed while handing out coffee to late night barricades, while participating in a march, or while leaving a neighborhood APPO meeting. Their murderers still walk the streets, now with the added protection and assistance of the PFP.

Ulises Claims Victory

On the morning after the mass repression, standing in the very spot where hundreds had run for their lives less than 18 hours before, Governor Ulises claimed victory. It had been months since he had been able to show his face in the city. As helicopters flew overhead, Governor Ulises, surrounded by plain clothed police, explained that now Oaxaca belongs to the true Oaxaqueños. "We who love Oaxaca, its history and its traditions feel profoundly offended and attacked by the vandals' actions on Saturday. The responsible are being arrested and should be held accountable for their actions in the face of justice. Today with the help of the PFP and the state forces we have recuperated the heart of Oaxaca for the Oaxaqueños and for all Mexicans." For hours prior to this press spectacle workers had cleaned up the remains of the police repression, they has picked up the tear gas canisters, the graffiti and stencils had been painted over. A large water truck has sprayed away the dried blood and burnt remains of the movement from the square.

Since November 25th the federal police have surrounded the Santo Domingo plaza and most large parks in the city, they are routinely patrolling the streets of Oaxaca. Reports of people being taken out of their homes or picked up off the streets by armed gunmen are being called in to Radio Universidad regularly. The station has once again called for support in fear that the police will manage to ignore the autonomous nature of the university and destroy the station, the primary means of communication remaining for the movement. Students of the College of Medicine at the Benito Juárez Autonomous University organized a press conference to share their testimonies of witnessing municipal police kill three demonstrators during Saturday's repression, taking their bodies with them. During the press conference armed gunmen fired into the building and took one student. There were 60 more detentions on November 27th. The PRI radio station has called for the burning of EDUCA offices, a well respected social organization that operates throughout the state. The station has also been reading on the air the addresses where suspected movement members and internationals are hiding. Over 140 of the movement members detained by the police have been transported far from their families, out of the state of Oaxaca, to federal prison.

Those in power continue to try to suppress this movement with intimidation, with violence, with murder because change is in motion. According to Cesar Chavez, "once social change begins, it cannot be reversed. You cannot uneducate the person who has learned to read. You cannot humiliate the person who feels pride. You cannot oppress the people who are not afraid anymore. We have seen the future, and the future is ours." On November 10th-12th, the movement held a Constitutive Congress where they elected 220 representatives from all seven regions, formalizing the popular governance structure of APPO. 3000 people attended the forum further defining their program of struggle and creating a true bottom up alternative to the corrupt political parties that run the state. I still fear for the people, how much suffering they will have to face. On November 20th there were an incredible number of actions worldwide in solidarity with the people of Oaxaca but there needs to be an even larger outcry. Please consider getting involved in solidarity actions. This is not simply to support the people of Oaxaca achieve self determination and social justice. They are providing a model for the rest of Mexico to also stand up in the face of poverty estimated at over 50 percent of the population, of losing their land and resources to foreign corporations, of having to flee to the US illegally to be able to provide for their families.

On the national level, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador held his own swearing in ceremony on November 20th as the "legitimate president" of Mexico in front of hundreds of thousands of supporters. Two days prior he told his supporters "Those neo-fascist reactionaries better not think they'll have room to maneuver, we're going to keep them on a short leash." Massive civil disobedience is planned for December 1st, the date of the inauguration ceremony for Felipe Calderon, who "won" the presidential election by less than one percentage point with clear evidence of fraud. The trend of electing leftist leadership continues in Latin America, confronting the injustice of neoliberal policies and beginning to unravel the exploitive policies that have left the majority of their population in immense poverty. At the same time, President Bush has quietly dropped the ban on training the militaries of Latin America. As our country readies itself to carry on our legacy of genocide to prevent the much needed changes the people are demanding, we must become active. Not only for the people of Oaxaca, or Mexico, or Latin America but for the global struggle that is taking root.

Rochelle Gause lives in Olympia, Washington. She can be reached at rochelle@riseup.net