---------- Forwarded message ----------
From:
Date: Tue, Nov 18, 2014 at 3:04 PM
Subject: Fwd: Nov. 20 Protest in SF to Demand Justice in Mexico;
The Meaning of Nov. 20 for Today; Solidarity Appeal for the
Ayotzinapa Students
To:
Dear Sisters and Brothers,å
Please join us this coming*Thursday, November 20*, at a march and
rally in San Francisco to protest the killings of 6 students and
the disappearance of 43 other students at the community teachers'
college in Ayotzinapa, Guerrero, in Mexico. The starting point of
the march will be at*4 pm at Justin Herman Plaza*. The march
will*end at the Civic Center to join forces with another protest
action* (protect Net Neutrality)*that will be taking place there*.
The march has been called by a broad coalition of organizations
led by the ANSWER coalition, including MEChXA and many other
Latino and grassroots community groups./The Organizer/ Newspaper
and its sister Spanish-language publication,/El Organizador,/ are
urging their readers and supporters to mobilize to demand justice
for the students in Ayotzinapa but also to place the onus for the
killings/disappearances on the Mexican State, as the workers and
students will be doing across Mexico in mass mobilizations and
student strikes on November 20 -- a national holiday in Mexico
that marks the beginning of the Revolution of 1910-1917. [See
Appendix 1 below on the Meaning of November 20 for Today.]
Here is the facebook link to the November march and rally in San
Francisco:
https://www.facebook.com/events/963615640332968
/The Organizer/ and/El Organizador/ have also been circulating
widely an Appeal issued by students across Mexico demanding
justice for the students of Ayotzinapa [see Appendix 2 below].
Please join us in circulating this Appeal widely.
** We Want The 43 Disappeared Students Back Alive!*
** Punish Those Responsible For These Crimes!*
** Justice Now!*
In struggle,
Editorial Board
/The Organizer/ Newspaper
* * * * * * * * * *
*APPENDIX No. 1*
*November 20 and Its Meaning For Today*
November 20 is the date that marks the beginning of the Mexican
Revolution of 1910-1917 that overthrew the pro-U.S. dictator
Porfirio Díaz and established a Constitution granting major
social, political and economic rights to the people of Mexico -
all gains that would be extended during the 1930s by the
government of Lázaro Cárdenas. November 20 marks the beginning of
a major social revolution that affirmed the sovereignty and
independence of Mexico against all foreign interests and against
all Mexican politicians in their service.
But November 20, 2014 - more than 100 years later - marks a
moment when the Mexican nation and its people, the majority of
them working class, are at a crossroads, as the entire political
establishment and its institutional parties (PRI, PAN and PRD)
have all accepted to implement the country-selling
"counter-reforms" promoted by President Enrique Peña Nieto, at
the behest of U.S. imperialist interests, in the name of the Pact
for Mexico (a misnomer, if ever there was one).
The implementation of these "counter-reforms" - which are due to
be carried out in the coming weeks - will constitute the
comprehensive dismantling of the material foundations of national
sovereignty and the full-scale destruction of the rights and
gains won through struggle by the working masses and the
oppressed people of Mexico during the Mexican Revolution.
Let us also not forget that during the 1930s, President Lázaro
Cárdenas expropriated the British and U.S. imperialist oil
companies and thus created the state oil company Petróleos
Mexicanos (PEMEX). Over the course of the next 76 years, oil
revenues were completely in the hands of the nation, which
provided for the establishment of the public healthcare system,
the national electrical utility CFE (Comisión Federal de
Electricidad), and other institutions in the interests of the
Mexican people.
Indeed, under pressure from the revolutionary movement that had
not yet died after 1917, Cárdenas carried out a far-reaching land
reform, which distributed 20 million hectares to low-income rural
workers and promoted the agrarian institution of the "ejido" -
communal land owned by the State but tenanted and worked by
individual farmers on an inalienable basis. In this same
situation, the State was compelled to recognize collective
bargaining for the oil workers and those in other industrial sectors.
The struggles of the 1930s were part of the continuity of the
Revolution of 1910-17, which posed the land issue among others
(the land was controlled by an oligarchic minority and foreign
estate-owners).
Today, the future of the Mexican nation is at stake, along with
its sovereignty and the survival of the working class and youth.
Mexico's oil is being handed over to foreign-owned transnational
corporations. The/ejido/, already negatively impacted by NAFTA,
is slated to be dismantled altogether. Mexico's national
healthcare and social service legislation are about to be destroyed.
On November 20, all the political institutions and mainstream
parties will be celebrating the Mexican Revolution and giving lip
service to its heros. But all the political institutions and
parties that supported NAFTA, and/or the Mérida Plan, and/or the
Pacto por México (as is the case of the PRI, PAN and PRD) have no
right - they have no moral or political authority - to speak in
the name of the Mexican Revolution of 1910-1917 or to celebrate
this historic date. Through all their actions, these
country-selling politicians, are reversing all the gains
enshrined in the Mexican Constitution as a result of this revolution.
It is now up to the Mexican working class - as demonstrated by
the electrical workers of the Sindicato Mexicano de Electricistas
(SME), who with their resistance struggle are calling to defend
Mexico's energy sector - and it is up to the Mexican youth, who
are organizing mass marches and general student strikes to demand
justice for the 43 disappeared students of Ayotzinapa - to
reclaim the banner of the Mexican Revolution of 1910-17 and drive
out all the corrupt politicians who have sullied the Mexican
struggle led by Pancho Villa and Emiliano Zapata for national
independence and social and economic justice. --*A.B.*
* * * * * * * * * *
*APPENDIX No. 2*
*
Ayotzinapa (Mexico) Solidarity Campaign*
** We Want The 43 Disappeared Students Back Alive!*
** Punish Those Responsible For These Crimes!*
** Justice Now!*
Mexico City, November 8, 2014
To Student Organizations and Youth Worldwide:
We, the undersigned students at schools and universities across
Mexico, write you this open letter to express the following:
On the night of September 26, 2014, in the city of Iguala,
Guerrero (Mexico), six people were killed (including three
"/normalistas/" - that is, youth studying to become public school
teachers). In addition, 25 "/normalistas/" were wounded (two of
them severely) and 43 others were kidnapped. All these young
people are students of the Raúl Isidro Burgos Teachers College in
Ayotzinapa, a school attended by children of the poorest peasant
families in the country.
The events of Iguala have shown for all to see the close
relationship that has been woven over recent decades between the
drug gangs and the State institutions (municipal and federal
police; mayors of all institutional parties; and army commanders,
who failed to take action to stop the repression and kidnapping
of the young "/normalistas/.")
The barbarism of Iguala has sparked a huge outcry among the
Mexican people, first and foremost among the hundreds of
thousands of young students who have taken to the streets in mass
demonstrations in all the states across Mexico. In Mexico City
alone, three major mass protests have taken place on October 8
and 22 and November 5, the latter having gathered more than
100,000 participants.
More than 40 days later, President Enrique Peña Nieto (PRI) and
Attorney General Jesús Murillo Karam have stated that the 43 were
killed, burned, tortured, and their bodies dumped in a river.
Parents and students of the 43 "/normalistas/" have rejected,
understandably, the declarations of Peña Nieto and Murillo Karam.
The parents have stated: "We have no confidence in the government
of Peña Nieto and the Attorney General." Indeed, for more than 40
days, the government has done nothing but slow down the
investigation and the trial of the detained police officers. They
have told lie after lie about what occurred. They have tried to
hide the close ties between the police and officials, on the one
hand, and the drug gangs, on the other. NO, we cannot accept what
the highest officials now tell us if there is no clear,
scientific/forensic proof to back their claims.
The parents of the disappeared students, supported by students
nationwide, are calling for increased mobilizations and
solidarity -- both locally and internationally -- until their
demands are met.
* We Want The 43 Disappeared Students Back Alive!
* Punish Those Responsible For These Crimes!
* Justice Now!
These barbaric acts are the most recent expression of a policy of
repression against the youth, and they are bound up with the
policies pursued by the State over the past few decades aimed at
destroying the hard-won gains of working people and dismantling
the sovereignty of the nation through the so-called "structural
reforms," "free trade" and privatization.
All these policies have led to a process of social decay and
corruption at all levels of government. Those responsible for
these crimes are not only those who directly kidnapped the
students; also responsible are the mayor of Iguala (now in jail),
the governor of the state of Guerrero (who was forced to resign
-- in both cases because of the pressure from below of the
protest movement), and the federal government of Enrique Peña
Nieto. In all the mass protests and in slogans painted on walls
nationwide, the youth are crying out: "The State Is Responsible."
Students and young workers, leaders of student organizations
around the world:
We call for solidarity in your countries with the just demands of
the "/normalistas/" in Ayotzinapa, Guerrero (Mexico), in ways
that you deem appropriate (delegations and protests at Mexican
embassies and consulates, letters of protests / emails to the
Mexican government, rallies, etc.).
We call on you to demand:
* We Want The 43 Disappeared Students Back Alive!
* Punish Those Responsible For These Crimes!
* Justice Now!
First endorsers:
*Centers of Higher Education*
*Mexico City: National Autonomous University of Mexico / UNAM:
*Fac. de Economía:/Mancilla Ramos Osvaldo, Rodríguez Serrano
Nuria, Cruz Vélez Azucena, Reyes Romero Miguel Ricardo, Galindo
Betanzos Juan Pablo, Santana Duarte Orlando, Barrón Arturo,
Martínez Edgard Adrián, Morales Rodríguez Juana del Carmen,
Romero Esquivel Miguel Eduardo/; Fac. de Arte y Diseño:/José
Miguel Silva/.*National Polytechnical University / IPN:* Escuela
Superior de Economía (ESE):/Wendoline Zamora/; Escuela de
Psicología:/Mariana Diosdado Cerroblanco;/ Escuela Superior de
Ingeniería Mecánica y Eléctrica (ESIME):/Jonathan Aparicio. Aldo
Toño Trejo, Alejandro Ávila Gutiérrez, Ángel Gutiérrez, Luis
Vázquez/.*Autonomous Metropolitican University / UAM:* Ciencias
Antropológicas/: Gabriela Montoya;/ Arquitectura/: Román Ortega
López;/ Diseño Industrial/: Cesiah Gómez Roldán; Ayudante de
investigación: Gloria Miroslava Callejas
Sánchez;/*Colmex/:/*/Josué Morachis, doctorado en
economía./*Instituto Tecnológico de Iztapalapa*,/Enrique
Hernández Granados/.
* *
*State of Jalisco*:*University of Guadalajara:* Economía/: Abiud
Sánchez, Andrés Ramírez, Claudia Mendoza;/ Sociología:/Fernanda
Justo, Jonathan Ávila, Erika Jazmín Venadero, Alan Escatel,
Javier Correa, Silvia López, Shannon Díaz, Topacio Lomelí;/
Derecho:/Miguel Solís;/ Preparatoria 10:/Abraham Garibi;
/Gestión y Economía ambiental:/Juan Manuel Chávez, Edith Baltazar./
*State of Sonora: UNISON:* Escuela de. Trabajo Social/: Gabriela
Aracely Encinas Arriola;/ Ingeniería Civil/: Francisco Eduardo
Noriega Arvizu./
/ /
*State of Baja California, Mexicali: Autonomous University of
Baja California / UABC,* Psicología/: Erick Antonio Pedroza Peña,
Adriana Ayala Macías, Antonio Pedroza Peña, Jesús Casillas
Arredondo, Marco Morales Rojo;/ Ciencias de la Educación/:
Melissa Villanueva;/ Ciencias de la Comunicación/: Manuel Ángeles
y Edgar Galván;/ Facultad de Ciencias Sociales y Políticas/:
Johan Alejandra Morales Silva;/ Facultad de Pedagogía e
Innovación Educativa/: Blanca Nathalia Carrillo Ortiz, Quetzalli
Figueroa;/ Facultad de Arquitectura/: Silvia Denisse Vidal,
Gabriela Anchondo;/ Facultad de Artes:/Erick García;/ Facultad de
Ciencias Administrativas/: José Williams;/ Facultad de Idiomas/:
Mayra Cordero./*University of the Valley of Mexicali / UVM,*
Derecho:/Carlos Elenes./*Technological Institute of Mexicali
/*/ /*ITM/-/*/Jesús Enrique Cinco Ramírez. E/studiante de
docencia en artes/Ana Cázares Casillas;/ estudiante de
preparatoria/Elisa Gastelum,; Licenciatura Contabilidad Pública -
auxiliar contable: Fabiola Cazares Casillas; Licenciada en
docencia de la lengua y literatura: Princesa Raquel Lizárraga
García./
/
/*Tijuana/:/ Autonomous University of Baja California / UABC*/,/
Facultad de Odontología/- Otzi Ramírez Guzmán;/ Facultad de
Humanidades/: Angélica Estrada, Luis Carlos Haro Montoya;/
Sociología/: Joshua Rivera Arvizu;/ Facultad de Turismo/: Laura
Alejandra Rivera Arvizu;/ Facultad de Ciencias Químicas e
Ingeniería:/Andrés Arroyo;/*Colegio de la Frontera Norte,*/María
Elizabeth Rivera Arvizu, Asistente de investigación en el
Departamento de Estudios Culturales/
* *
*Ensenada: University of Baja California / UABC:* Facultad de
Ciencias Marinas/: Sergio Enrique III Rebelin Aranda;/
Sociología/Erika Guadalupe Pérez Pacheco -/
/ /
*Estado de Chiapas, National Autonomous University of Chiapas /
UNACH:* Medicina/: Nataly Jiménez García, Jorge Domingo Parcero
Torres, Isaura Elvia Corzo Martínez;/ Pedagogía/: Deiner López
Hernández;/ Arquitectura:/Héctor Ernesto Gusmán Vásquez;/*Center
for Scientific and Technical Education / CECyTCH/:/*/María Elisa
Santiz Gómez./
For more information and/or to send reports on actions in your
schools, cities and countries: justicia.para.ayotzi(a)gmail.com
<mailto:justicia.para.ayotzi@gmail.com>
--
Rafael Jesús González
P.O. Box 5638
Berkeley, CA 94705
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