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July 1999


Indigenous communities fight trans-Mexico canal



Zoila José Juan, an indigenous Mexican woman, spoke at Calles y Sueños in Chicago on June 20. She discussed growing resistance to the "Trans Isthmus Megaproject," a multinational effort to dig a canal between the Gulf of Yucatan and the Pacific Ocean. Her visit was sponsored by La coordinadora and the Chicago-Mexico Solidarity Committee.-Ed.

I come from Oaxaca state and my community is Boca del Monte. My organization, the Union of Indigenous Communities of the Northern Zone of the Isthmus, is based in Matías Romero. It was founded in 1985 and we're growing. Our language isn't Spanish, it's Mixe. I work with the women's commission of UCIZONI in the indigenous communities in Oaxaca, Guerero, Chiapas, Veracruz, and Yucatan.

STATE'S MEGAPLAN FOR ISTHMUS

The present government has abandoned this whole area. We're afraid of being marginalized and are resisting government repression. The biggest struggle we have as indigenous people is abandonment and discrimination against our communities-in particular the "Mega Project"-because we are in the isthmus.

It's not just our community. This is a problem for people in Oaxaca, Veracruz, and so on. We have formed an alliance to defend ourselves and our land. This program has invited foreigners to buy land, our "mother," a state green and sweet. We still have our waters and our springs. These people want to take over our riches, so we want to figure out how to carry our struggle forward.

We don't have enough schools. As an organization we have struggled for education. We are struggling to get high schools. They just want to give us "satellite schools"-schools with a television. If somebody wants a higher education, they have to leave the region, but one thing we know is that we aren't going to abandon ourselves.

A railway and a highway go through the isthmus. One plan is to widen the Trans Isthmus Highway and make it into a superhighway. They want to widen the railway as well. Trains could benefit us since they are the cheapest way to travel, but now there's no more passenger service between Coatzacoalas and Salina Cruz. Since there's no benefit from this, it could only hurt us by running through communities. It's another way to get us out of there.

Now they are trying to deceive us with misery money into planting eucalyptus trees, acres and acres of them. This plant is not from our region. They want us to plant them for paper mills. The little money they will give us we'll lose right away. This plant dries up the land and sucks up the water table. Our water comes from streams and wells. We bathe in it and wash in it. What's going to happen if we plant these trees? We are going to end up like a dessert.

TAKING FROM EJIDOS

They also try to fool us, by saying there's going to be work for everyone when the area is developed. It's a lie. When industry enters, mostly petrochemicals, there will be some work, but with all the chemicals, they're going to screw us. We don't have the money for taking care of poisoned victims. In Torrejón chemicals affected women and kids. Where do the chemicals come from? Our compadres work in maquilas [factories producing for export], and they tell us about them. Without communication, we wouldn't know what's happening to our communities.

Each person is a member of the ejido [communal land]. The agriculture ministry wants to send engineers to measure these lands, and afterwards they will give you an official title, for free, an agrarian certificate. They tell us that these people will help you out by giving you a deed because where the lands are held in common, you can't get loans to cultivate them, but where they are held privately, you can get loans.

The tell us they're not there to take away or give to us any land, but the commissioner of ejidos wants to know how big is your property and how much is left over. They are going to take this extra piece and sell it to someone else. A lot of people don't have land and they are not allowed to cut wood on that extra land. You used to be able to do that, but now you can't because it has an owner.

FORUMS OF RESISTANCE

In the struggle against the Mega-project we have forums about the isthmus, and people from other states visit us. We also do marches and other protests. This is why the project has not been carried out yet.

Last year we had a lot of repression. One hundred and twenty of us were arrested. Women protested on March 8, International Women's Day in Oaxaca City. We had worked up to a meeting with the governor of the state, and finally he gave us a small amount of support.

But then they arrested one hundred of us, men and women in, Tepalcatepec, in front of the justice department, when we protested about people already in jail. Police went after the old people and women. Some of us ended up with broken heads and broken feet. After the protests, 80 people were still in jail. They wanted us to give 60,000 pesos per person to get them out of jail. We got support from other organizations.

When we were in Chiapas, we asked when do we continue the work of the Zapatista national consultation. Every news organization, every municipality is going to have meetings to ask how far to carry it forward; how we can keep in contact with Zapatistas; whether to have another national gathering. So it's a another way to carry out resistance. We also will hold a protest in Mexico City and will carry a letter to Congress. Before we do that, we are going to find out what people want in our communities.



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