By the Mexico Solidarity Network, Rainforest Action Network
and Global Exchange
Introduction
Last year Mexicans ended seven decades of one-party rule with the
election of Vicente Fox as president. The new administration assumed
the mantle of power with much rhetoric calling for an end to
corruption and impunity, a new climate of democracy, and respect for
human rights. The highly publicized arrests of human rights and
drug-trafficking offenders such as Acosta Chaparro and Mario
Villanueva present the international community with a new image of
Mexico in which the abuses of the past will no longer be
tolerated. For the citizens of the southern state of Guerrero,
however, reality is much different. Murder, disappearances,
extra-judicial assassination, harassment by caciques (local political
bosses,) and military displacement are common occurrences in the
impoverished state. Government corruption is widespread, with many
officials enriching themselves by selling Guerrero's old growth
forests to transnational corporations. In Guerrero, as in the rest of
the country, the effects of such human rights abuses and environmental
degradation are disproportionately felt by poor communities. Guerrero
claims over 60 political prisoners, many of whom have been convicted
on trumped up charges of arms possession or drug-trafficking.1
From June 4 to 13, 2001 a delegation of representatives from the
Mexico Solidarity Network, Rainforest Action Network, and Global
Exchange (all non-governmental organizations) traveled to the state of
Guerrero. The delegation met with representatives from various human
rights and environmental organizations, academics, and government
agencies and investigated human rights and environmental degradation
six months into the Fox administration.
Human Rights
Guerrero is laden with victims of past and present human rights
abuses -- including political prisoners, children orphaned through
massacres, communities displaced by military occupation, and survivors
of government-sponsored massacres. The delegation met with such
victims as well as leaders of local human rights organizations, legal
advocacy groups, and campesino environmentalist organizations.
Political prisoners Rodolfo Montiel and Teodoro Cabrera were
imprisoned in 1998 on charges of illegal arms possession and
drug-trafficking. Part of a struggle to protect native forests that
has left five people dead at the hands of security forces and death
squads, the environmentalists' real crime was protesting deforestation
in their native Costa Grande region. The National Human Rights
Commission has conceded that the prisoners' confessions, which form
the basis of the cases against them, were obtained under torture by
military personnel. Under immense pressure from national and
international human rights organizations, legal advocacy groups, and
solidarity organizations (the Ecologists received the Goldman
Environmental and the Chico Méndez Awards and have been
declared Prisoners of Conscience by Amnesty International,) on May 9,
2001 the Segundo Tribunal Colegiado de Circuito in Chilpancingo,
Guerrero granted an appeal on the basis of previously inadmissible
evidence consisting of medical certificates demonstrating physical
evidence of torture. The appeal is scheduled to be heard later this
month.
To Guerrerans, the words El Charco mean not just "The Puddle," but
another dark stain in a history marred by injustice. On June 6th and
7th local organizations gathered at El Charco in the Costa Chica
highlands for the 3rd Anniversary of Mourning for the Massacre at El
Charco to demand justice and a general amnesty for Guerrero's
political prisoners. The meeting commemorated the murder of 11
campesinos by the Mexican Army on June 7, 1998 during a grass-roots
meeting with members of the Revolutionary Army of the Insurgent People
(ERPI.) Around 4am on that date, the Army surrounded the schoolhouse
where the campesinos were asleep and opened fire into the schoolhouse,
killing three. Eight more were killed with "tiros de gracia" (bullet
to the back of the skull) on the basketball court outside the
schoolhouse. The National Human Rights Commission has yet to issue a
report on the killings, and there have been no prosecutions of
military personnel involved.
While current statistics regarding the number of military
personnel in Guerrero are unavailable, the military continues to
maintain a heavy presence in civilian life in the state. In 1997
estimated personnel was between 25 and 45 thousand, and there is no
indication of a reduction in troop presence since that time.2 In May
of 2000 army personnel arrived in the community of La Pie de la Cuesta
in the municipality of Acapulco de Juárez and expropriated 70
hectares of villagers' farm lands outside the community. Under the
pretext of preserving the ecology of the region, the military sealed
off the area and prohibited community members from accessing land they
have farmed for over 30 years. The soldiers then proceeded to build
roads and assemble barracks -- destroying trees, crops, and other
vegetation on the land they were claiming to preserve. The Union of
Farmworkers in Pie de la Cuesta has filed numerous complaints with the
federal, state, and local government, but the situation has yet to be
resolved.
Despite the change in federal administration, PRI-style strong-arm
tactics dispensed by caciques also persist. In the community of
Leonardo Rodríguez Alcaine in Acapulco, residents have been
attempting to gain title to their land since 1991 when the local
comptroller was authorized by the state government to grant residents
title to their property. Registration has never occurred, however, due
to the violent intransigence of the local cacique. Residents who have
continued the legal battle to obtain title to their properties have
had their utilities cut off, received death threats, been evicted, and
had their houses burglarized, sacked, and burned. Despite numerous
petitions by residents and legal advocates from the non-governmental
Human Rights Commission "La Voz de los Sin Voz," residents continue to
live under fear, harassment, and intimidation by hired thugs as well
as local authorities.
Environmental Degradation
With both coastal and mountainous terrain, Guerrero has a rich and
diverse ecosystem. For over half a century Guerrero's forests have
been exploited by local and transnational logging companies who enjoy
government concessions and lucrative contracts conceded by local
caciques, leaving local farmers impoverished with a rapidly
deteriorating environment. In the mountainous regions of
Petatlán and Coyuca de Catalán, for example, 40 percent
of native forest coverage has disappeared over the last eight years
alone.3 One need only drive the coastal highway of the Costa Grande to
see the numerous timber mills and massive volumes of large diameter
trees that are still being extracted from the Sierra. Intensified
logging activities in Guerrero during the last decade have impacted
the entire ecological chain, resulting in soil erosion, depletion of
aquifers, increasing frequency of floods, climate changes, and
disappearance of local fauna and biodiversity.
Sivestre Pacheco, adviser to the Organization of Campesino
Ecologists from the Mountains of Petatlán (OCESP,) estimates
that two tons of topsoil (the equivalent of 2cm per unit area) are
lost per hectare per year in the Costa Grande region because of
erosion due to deforestation. The Secretary of the Environment and
Natural Resources (SEMARNAT) has concluded that the river basins in
the mountains of the Costa Grande are in "critical"
condition. Disappearance of forest cover has also caused increasing
droughts and changed patterns of precipitation. Modest, regular rains
during the wet season have been replaced in recent years with heavy
storms, accompanied by severe flooding and soil erosion.
Hilda Navarrete of La Voz de los Sin Voz has observed dramatic
changes in the Coyuca River that runs adjacent to her community of
Coyuca de Benítez. In the mountains inland where the Coyuca
River is formed, communities such as El Tambor have experienced heavy
logging in the last few years. Soil that washes down the slopes pushes
its way down river, filling the riverbed with sediment near Hilda's
home. As a result, the river overflows its banks far more frequently
now, flooding poor communities on the riverbanks of the surrounding
area.
Transnational Corporations
Though numerous actors have been party to the exploitation of
Guerrero's vast forest resources -- including peasants, farmers, and
Mexican logging companies -- none have left greater devastation in
their wake than foreign transnational corporations, especially US
giant Boise Cascade. Ratification of the North American Free Trade
Agreement (NAFTA) in 1994 facilitated logging activity in Mexico by
allowing foreign corporations to purchase ejido (communally-held farm
land) timber. From 1995 to 1998, Boise Cascade exercised questionable
contracts with local ejido unions authorized by corrupt state
officials to cut old growth forests.
The Ejido Union Ruben Figueroa Figueroa (UERFF,) operating in the
municipalities of Petatlán and Coyuca de Catalán in the
Costa Grande region, was Boise Cascade's principal partner. With the
help of local cacique and UERFF leader, Bernadino Bautista Valle, then
governor Ruben Figueroa Alcocer granted Boise Cascade exclusive rights
to the purchase of wood from the region. According to Silvestre
Pacheco, "During the dry seasons from 1995 to 1998, logging trucks
came out of the mountains continuously, 24 hours a day. Such
quantities of wood-extraction were unprecedented in this area."
Furthermore, it is estimated that, in the process of cutting and
transporting trees, 50 smaller trees are destroyed for every
marketable tree removed.4
Boise Cascade claims to have never cut down a tree in Guerrero --
a true statement as the UERFF contracted local laborers to fell and
transport the trees. For this reason Boise Cascade claims exemption
from Mexican laws requiring that resources be replenished by parties
responsible for their destruction. Additionally, Boise Cascade claims
to have funded local community development projects such as schools,
basketball courts, and bridges but refuses to disclose information
regarding location of the projects and funding provided. When local
communities petitioned the state government for repair of roads
damaged by excessive use by logging trucks carrying wood destined for
Boise Cascade mills, the UERFF set up toll plazas to pay for the
repairs -- charging local cars, trucks, and pedestrians for use of the
roads. According to SEMARNAT, Boise Cascade was aware of the political
relationships between the UERFF, Bautista, and Figueroa, and when
violence erupted they pulled out. Their actions were not
innocent. SEMARNAT states that Boise Cascade's goal was to capitalize
on the commercial potential of the forests, and that they did so
without regard to implications for human rights or the environment.
Conclusion
The overwhelming conclusion of persons and organizations with whom
the delegation met is that little has changed in Guerrero in terms of
respect for human rights and the environment. The absence of
large-scale massacres in recent years merely represents a change in
tactics by the government. The current modus operandi by which
dissents are suppressed and resources extracted are paramilitary
activity, caciquismo, and military occupation. Prevailing opinion in
Guerrero is that there continues to be a strong correlation between
transnational corporate activity, environmental degradation, and human
rights violations.
While the Fox administration represents a new face for Mexican
politics, the fundamental policies followed by the past three PRI
administrations continue at an accelerated rate. The new
administration is selling Mexico to transnational corporations based
on the comparative advantages of low wages and lax environmental
regulations. Rather than developing internal markets and increasing
wages, Fox is continuing down the neoliberal road that has meant
increased profits for corporations but impoverished Mexican workers
and a rapidly deteriorating environment.
Notes
- "Mexico is Releasing Political Prisoners it Once Denied Ever
Existed," John Ross, December 31, 2000.
- Siempre Cerca, Siempre Lejos: Las Fuerzas Armadas en Mexico;
Global Exchange, CIEPAC, and CENCOS; September, 2000.
- "La Lucha por el Bosque," Armando Bartra, March, 2001.
Interview with Silvestre Pacheco, MSN, June, 2001.