May: Hidalgo, the fifth stele. (The Mexico of Below)
08/02/2003
- Opinión
The gaze accompanies the hand as it leafs through the calendar and
stops at the month of MAY. And it is the May sun which illuminates
one word: HIDALGO.
Hidalgo. According to the INEGI, it had more than two and a quarter
million inhabitants three years ago. Of them, more than 300,000,
above the age of 5, spoke an indigenous language. Inhabiting Hidalgo
lands are Nahua indigenous, Otomíes-Hñañúes, Tepehuas, Zapotecos,
Huastecos, Mixtecos and Totonacos.
May. Hidalgo. One must move close to the ground in order to walk
these lands, and the cloud becomes stone in order to follow the path
of the Mexico of below. And Hidalgo is, at the same time, both a
horrifying and an encouraging example of this country's bottommost.
Horrifying? Yes, according to researcher Julio Boltvinik, the state
of Hidalgo is among the 7 poorest states in the country, with 73% of
its residents in extreme poverty, almost indigent, and 29% of them
are moderately poor. In sum: 93% of Hidalgo residents are poor (La
Jornada, August 30, 2002).
As for marginalization figures, some studies (CONAPO) place Hidalgo
among the 5 states with a "very high level of marginalization"
(illiteracy, unserviced houses, low salaries, lack of health
services), along with Chiapas, Guerrero, Oaxaca and Veracruz.
Fox government analyses reveal terrifying statistics for Hidalgo: it
is among those states in the Republic with the shortest life
expectancies, with the greatest rates of infant mortality and with
more mortality in general, with the least internal gross product,
with the greatest labor inequality, with the lowest salaries, with
the most illiteracy, with the lowest rates of school attendance, with
the most houses without plumbing, without electricity and with dirt
floors.
In 5 municipalities alone, with a total of more than 100,000
residents, illiteracy is at about 50%, more than two thirds of the
population has not completed elementary school, and the same
percentage of houses are without plumbing, without electricity, have
dirt floors and are overcrowded. According to the same study by the
Office of the Presidency of the Republic, more than half the
population of the state of Hidalgo is rural, and almost a fifth is
indigenous.
The poverty is such that the cloud made stone does not know whether
it has chosen the wrong path and it has returned to the Chiapas of
its origin.
And no, it is not in Chiapas, although somehow its origin comes to
mind when it looks at the Hidalgo Huasteca, which, along with the
Veracruz portion, the Potosi, and the Tamaulipas, is a clear example
of what abounds in the Mexico of below: extreme poverty, repression,
rebellion.
Huejutla de Reyes, in Huasteca, is the Hidalgo municipality with the
greatest concentration of indigenous (more than 60,000 Nahuatl
speakers), but there are also a large number of municipalities in the
area whose populations are made up of indigenous towns of between 500
and 9000 inhabitants.
La Huasteca. This is the land which saw the birth of this rolling
stone, and which nurtured it with its wisdom and its struggle. It is
the land which it bid farewell to some years ago, not without having
previously learned that one cannot live without doing something.
"Where there are many poor, there are a few rich," goes the saying
which is engraved on another stone, the stone of history, next to
another, which says: "And where there are a few rich, some of them
are the government."
The current governor is M. A. Núñez Soto (born in Actopan on
January 30, 1951). He was not chosen by the people of Hidalgo, but
by Murillo Karam, in a process which left out José Guadarrama, a
former chancellor of the University, chief of thugs and expert in
election frauds. With help from two fugitives (Zedillo and
Labastida), Núñez Soto gained the nomination and perpetrated one of
the most brazen and scandalous election frauds in this country's
history.
In order to accomplish that, he had the help of the PAN-PVEM
candidate, Francisco Javier Berganza, who legitimized the fraud as
soon as the polls closed. Señor Berganza, who has experience in this
fraud business (as when he was a child "singer" and won "contests"
with the same technique), is a ridiculous, opportunistic, mediocre
and corrupt individual, the very reason for which he will always fail
in politics. An individual like that could only be protected by the
PAN...well, also by the PRI...well, also by the PRD...hmm...well, how
can we put it, Señor Berganza, despite his defeat in the
gubernatorial election, has a great future as a politician, and he
could end up as coordinator of the parliamentary wing in the Senate
of any of the political parties.
The PRD-PT candidate, Miguel Angel Granados Chapa, denounced the
fraud, but he was quickly abandoned by the parties which were
supposedly supporting him, perhaps because he is honest. The Núñez
Soto elections were revealing: there was an abstention rate of more
than 50%. Two years after the election, José Guadarrama (following a
path that is now typical for Mexican politicians) changed parties and
joined...the PRD! Which received him with open arms.
Núñez Soto governs like all PRI governors, like a cacique. And the
cacique logic says: what cannot be bought, can be beaten, imprisoned,
killed. The people of Hidalgo have known this though various
administrations.
In 1995, the FDOMEZ denounced assassinations in Yahualica,
Tianguistengo, Huezalingo, Atlapexca and Huejutla. The teacher,
Pedro Palma, assassinated on the orders of Jonguitud Barrios in 1982,
is buried in Ixmiquilpan. And the teacher Misael Núñez Acosta
(ordered killed with the consent of Los Pinos - the presidential
residence which is also known as "Sahagún City" - Elba Esther
Gordillo), was born in these lands, in Chapulhuacán.
Not one to be left behind, Núñez Soto did the same as his
predecessors. The Mexican League for the Defense of Human Rights
(Limeddh) denounced the raids, attacks, arbitrary detentions and
disappearances that had been perpetrated against Nahua indigenous of
the community of Tlalchiyahualica, in the municipality of Yahualica.
All of this is confirmed in File #MEXO080500 of the World
Organization Against Torture, which is headquartered in Geneva,
Switzerland.
But it has not been only social and indigenous leaders who have
suffered from repression in Hidalgo.
The Confidential News Agency (CAN), created in 2001 as an anti-
corruption and anti-repression movement within the journalism
profession (they disseminate information without charge and do not
demand citation as a source), has documented several cases of
repression of the press in Hidalgo.
In Mineral del Monte, on February 21, 2001, reporter Jorge Lozano
Pérez, of the "Eagle or Sun" newspaper in that city, was detained,
beaten and robbed by police officers. His "crime" was having
denounced anomalies and irregularities in the Ayuntamiento of Mineral
del Monte, as well as abuses by the police. When he was detained for
a highway incident, the journalist's press credentials were found,
and the police then told him that they had orders from the then
municipal president, Angelina Rosa Bulos Islas, to "sort him out."
In October of that same year, Feliciano Hernández López and Juan
Manuel Hernández Rodríguez, correspondents for the "Ruta" and
"Avanzando en Hidalgo" newspapers in the Otomí-Tepehua sierra
respectively, denounced in Case #CNIOCDHEH/018/2001, before the
National and International Commission of Human Rights Organizations
and Confederations in the State of Hidalgo, that they had been
victims of intimidations by the then municipal president of San
Bartolo Tutotepec, Dagoberto Islas Trejo, who was attempting to
dictate their news stories through threats and the use of the
municipal police.
On October 31, reporter Dylan Rodríguez, from the "Ruta" newspaper,
was called to appear before the federal Public Ministry agent, Jaime
García Belio, in investigation #P/217/2001, for having denounced in a
news article (relative to the mechanism by which pyrotechnical
explosives were being brought into Hidalgo) certain incidents of
corruption committed by members of the Mexican army and the Federal
Preventive Police.
According to an article by María Eugenia Pérez García, published in
"Los Periodistas" of the Reporters Fraternity in January of 2001,
political, ideological and economic control has kept a good part of
the press co-opted in the state of Hidalgo. The government controls
the media through publicity, "leaking" information through the
ayuntamiento press offices.
The stone rolls from Huasteca to the state capital, Pachuca, "the
graceful beauty."
If, in Huasteca, the crime is being indigenous, in Pachuca it is in
being young and street and punk. For the government and the rich of
Pachuco, "Street," "Band," "Punk" and "Young" are synonymous with
delinquency.
But those young persons, who live in the poorest neighborhoods in
Pachuca, are trying to organize themselves and open spaces for
cultural expression and find jobs. One of them said: "The other day
I was at a job interview, but another guy came, white and better
dressed, and they gave it to him." One of the girls from the gang was
thrown out of school for being pregnant, thus taking away her
opportunity for an education. The government's police officers have
their "hunting" hours, during which time they dedicate themselves to
persecuting, beating and jailing young people for the "crime" of
dressing differently. The political parties cozy up to them during
elections (also "hunting," but for votes), but, as soon as they are
over, they join in with the atmosphere of intolerance.
It is not only here that groups of punks or "street gangs" are
surviving, resisting and struggling. There are similar groups on
other parts of the Mexico of below: Cuernavaca, Atizapán, Neza,
Iztapalapa, Monterrey, Guadalajara, Ciudad Madero, DF, León, Celaya,
Querétaro, Tijuana, Hermosillo, Chihuahua.
But these young persons are quite far from having been ground down by
the system. They are organizing themselves in music groups and study
circles, and, with their music, their dances, their discussions,
their accords and their actions, they are linking themselves with
popular struggles throughout the country. The ones who are also
graffiti artists force the walls to shout rebellion. The government
doesn't like it, and takes them to jail...if it can catch them.
The stone continues its path and hops to Zapotlán. There, in the
community of Acayuca, there are maquilas which are run by small
owners. The people who work in these places have few resources and
no security, since they are clandestine locations.
Here, in the San Javier valley, where the municipalities of Zapotlán,
Tolcayuco, Villa de Tezontepec and Tizayuca share ground, was where
the land had been proposed for the alternate airport for Mexico City.
This mega-project included the building of a three lane highway which
would lead to DF. The proposal has still not been accepted, but
another, new one, has been brought up: an Industrial Corridor, with
foreign capital of course. The campesinos in the area have opposed
the expropriation of their lands.
Many of these campesinos have organized in order to defend their
lands. When the municipal government approved and lent all their
support to the building of the airport, a group of campesinos took
over the Municipal Presidential Office on two different occasions, in
addition to closing two lanes of the Mexico-Pachuca highway. It is
worth pointing out that the political parties have tried to co-opt
them, by promising them that they would respect their lands, but the
industrial corridor projects and the growth of the maquilas continue.
The governor of the State of Hidalgo, Manuel Angel Núñez Soto, has
expressed great interest in the Municipal Presidencies in the San
Javier Valley remaining in the hands of the PRIs. He managed to
achieve this, with the exception of Tizayuca, which the PAN won.
But, since there is no difference between the PRI and the PAN, not in
the degree of corruption nor in the (low) intelligence quotients,
Señor Núñez Soto is satisfied (and, along with him, so are the
powerful players in Hidalgo).
Rolling, always rolling, the stone reaches the municipality of
Ixmiquilpan. There is El Tephé thermal water spa. It is a clean,
comfortable, well attended, inexpensive and informal hotel. But it
does not belong to any of the large hotel chains. It belongs to an
indigenous community, and it is run by their members. National and
international tourists who visit El Tephé are received - without
servility, but attentively - by these indigenous who fought, and
hard, to recover the lands which the rich had stolen from them. And
that twofold lesson, fighting for what belonged to them and
administering the wealth of their land successfully and equitably, is
something for which the powerful cannot forgive the indigenous of El
Tephé.
The stone goes on and learns.
It continues its path, and, on the side of a clay hill, sheltered in
the dawn, a truth disguised as graffiti is scrawled: "'Rebellion' is
written with an 'X' (for MeXico and El MeXe.)."
And, "like a rolling stone," the stone continues on its way in
subterranean Hidalgo (which, like all nethermost Mexico, abounds not
only in poverty, but also in rebel dignity), recognizing and greeting
its fellow stones.
And thus it reaches the municipality of Francisco I. Madero, also
called Tepatepec, which means "hill of clay" or "hill of flint." And
here a spark is emitted, as if from a flint, which still illuminates
the recent history of Hidalgo.
On February 6, 2000, the Federal Preventive Police (led at that time
by a military man, Wilfredo Robledo, who is today a fugitive) took
the Autonomous National University of Mexico by storm and arrested
more than 700 members of that school's General Strike Council. Two
weeks later, the Hidalgo police tried to close down the "Luis
Villarreal" rural normal school in El Mexe, but something happened.
In January of that year, the fight to keep their school from being
closed led to the students taking it over. On the 26th, the
government announced that the school was closed and that the students
who were staying there were "occupying it illegally." They cut off
the electricity, the water and the telephone, and almost a third of
the students were arrested. The conditions of their release were
that they had to sign saying that they would not participate in any
more protests and that they would enroll in the National Pedagogical
University (UPN), Pachuca campus.
Students from normal rural schools in other states, who are also
fighting to keep their schools from being closed, set up tents in the
Pachuca plaza in support of El Mexe. At three in the morning on
February 19, more than 500 policemen arrested 736 students and
returned 700 of them to their state.
The police left Pachuca and went to Tepatepec, and they attacked the
people, beating up women, children and old persons and destroying
homes. They went to El Mexe and arrested 176 students and committed
violations. They took the students to the jail in Pachuca, and some
150 police officers remained to "protect" the school.
Two hours later, residents organized for resistance. They laid siege
to the school with barricades of rocks and bonfires, destroyed police
vehicles (18) and took 68 police officers prisoner (the rest fled in
vehicles or through the sewage canal). Residents stripped the
policemen and took them to the central plaza. When they searched the
school and vehicles, the residents discovered an arsenal (the police
had supposedly been unarmed): grenade launchers, rifles and pistols.
The objective had been to "plant" weapons in the school in order to
accuse the students of being "guerrilleros." Ultimately, the
government exchanged the imprisoned students for the police officers
who had been detained. The majority of the students from here are
organized in the Federation of Mexican Socialist Campesino Students
(FECSM).
The struggle for the defense of the normal schools is not new, nor is
it exclusive to here. Their students are poor and their avocation is
to serve their towns and to fight in order to change the situation of
injustice which they are living in. There are, for example, the
normal school students from Amilcingo, in Morelos; the ones from
Panotla, in Tlaxcala; the Ayotzinapa, in Guerrero, to mention just a
few of the many who, like those from El Mexe, are resisting being
turned into the docile servants of those who are power and government
in Mexico.
In El Mexe, a police officer, naked without his weapons, summed up
what had happened: "We always win, but now it was our turn to lose."
The sentence is also a prophecy.
Always rolling, the stone takes its leave of El Mexe, where a sign
reflects: "Unfortunate are the towns where youth does not make the
world tremble and students are submissive in the face of the tyrant."
The stone leaves Hidalgo. He has learned much from the shouts and
silences which inhabit the mountains of this state. The main thing
is that today poverty and rebellion are what unite all of the Mexico
of below. There will have to be much struggle so that that union
will be in justice, liberty and democracy.
The stone keeps rolling.
There, in the distance, in Querétaro lands, waiting impatiently, are
the Firulais Loyola and Commander Fernández de Cevallos, that is, the
dog and the dog's master...
From the mountains of the Mexican Southeast.
Subcomandante Insurgente Marcos
Mexico, January of 2003.
* Translated by irlandesa
https://www.alainet.org/es/node/107037
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