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<text id=94TT0054>
<title>
Jan. 17, 1994: Zapata's Revenge
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Jan. 17, 1994 Genetics:The Future Is Now
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
MEXICO, Page 32
Zapata's Revenge
</hdr>
<body>
<p>A bloody uprising in one of the country's poorest states serves
as an embarrassing reminder that Mexico has not quite joined
the First World's industrial club
</p>
<p>By Michael S. Serrill--Reported by Adrienne Bard/Mexico City and Kieran Murray/San
Cristobal de las Casas
</p>
<p> The last fireworks had fizzled and the New Year's celebration
had just about come to an end when the people of San Cristobal
de las Casas, Mexico, were treated to an even more dramatic
spectacle. Into the town square marched 300 armed peasants,
most of them wearing army fatigues and the bandanas that have
become the trademark of Latin American revolutionaries. On this
opening day of the traitorous North American Free Trade Agreement,
their leaders announced, the neglected and exploited Indian
people of Chiapas were declaring war on the Mexican government.
Then they attacked San Cristobal's town hall, breaking down
its heavy wooden doors and hurling computers and other equipment
out of the windows before setting the first floor of the building
ablaze.
</p>
<p> In three other towns--Ocosingo, Altamirano and Las Margaritas--over the next few hours, hundreds of guerrillas armed with
machine guns, hunting rifles and in some cases toy pistols ransacked
government buildings and sent local police into flight. Before
the episode was over as many as 2,000 guerrillas had occupied
San Cristobal and six other towns in the highlands of Chiapas,
the southernmost state of Mexico and one of its poorest. They
took at least a dozen police, ranchers and a former state governor
hostage before melting into the mountains, with the Mexican
army in hot pursuit. In four days of sometimes furious gun battles
between soldiers and rebels, more than 100 people died.
</p>
<p> The Mexican army was praised at first for its restraint, but
before the fighting was over, there were charges that captured
rebels had been executed and that soldiers had needlessly endangered
civilians. International and Mexican human-rights groups are
investigating.
</p>
<p> The outburst was the first serious left-wing violence Mexico
has seen in 20 years. As the rebels had planned, the uprising
came at a most embarrassing time for the government of President
Carlos Salinas de Gortari. With the implementation of NAFTA
on Jan. 1, Salinas had pronounced Mexico on its way to status
as a modern, industrialized nation. The Chiapas uprising highlighted
a fact brought out in the NAFTA debate: vast sections of rural
Mexico that have been left out of Salinas' modernization drive
may be fertile ground for future instability.
</p>
<p> U.S. financial experts insisted the rebellion would have little
effect on plans to invest in Mexico, partly because Chiapas
was never viewed as a prime area for economic development. But
some political analysts believed the uprising might be a harbinger
of further troubles. While Mexico's growth rate is impressive,
says Peter Hakim, president of Inter-American Dialogue, a Washington-based
think tank and forum for exchange among leaders in the hemisphere,
the gap between haves and have-nots is wide, and inequity and
discrimination are rife. "With those kinds of abuses--alienation,
disaffection, isolation, exploitation," says Hakim, "the prospect
of some kind of uprising is always there."
</p>
<p> What amounted to a violent takeover of a swath of highland Chiapas
came with surprising ease and swiftness. The insurgents met
little resistance as they swept into the old colonial city of
San Cristobal de las Casas and other towns and occupied some
of them for as long as three days before the government was
able to organize its counterstrike. Calling themselves the Zapatista
National Liberation Army, after Emiliano Zapata, the legendary
hero of Mexico's 1910 revolution, the rebels said their goal
was to stop the "genocide" of the region's Indians. Indians
from Morelos state played a strong role in Zapata's famous Liberation
Army of the South. Most of Chiapas' 3.2 million people have
some Indian heritage; 250,000 are full-blooded Maya who speak
Spanish, if at all, as a second language.
</p>
<p> The rebels, apparently led by a man known only as Comandante
Marcos, issued a communique from the occupied towns. "The war
we declare is a final but justified measure," the statement
said. "We have nothing, absolutely nothing. Not a dignified
roof, nor work, nor land, nor health care, nor education."
</p>
<p> As they departed from San Cristobal, the insurgents painted
their goals in black on a wall in the main square: "Mexicans:
Gone to Rancho Nuevo, then to Tuxtla," the state capital. "There
will be no rest from now on." They then launched an audacious
attack on the Rancho Nuevo military prison, freeing 178 inmates
before being driven off by troops backed by helicopter gunships.
The worst casualties came when a public-transport minibus was
seized by seven or eight rebels, and the vehicle was riddled
with bullets by an army patrol, killing 14.
</p>
<p> The fiercest battle took place in Ocosingo, where rebel units
tried to hold the town against an assault by overwhelmingly
superior government forces. About 30 guerrillas were killed.
In the central market, scene of the heaviest fighting, reporters
found the bodies of six rebels. Their hands had been tied, and
each had been killed with a bullet in the back of the head,
apparent victims of a summary execution.
</p>
<p> The guerrillas pulled out of most towns before the army arrived
and headed back into the highland forests from which they had
emerged. Government forces rained bombs and bullets on their
path of retreat from planes and helicopters, then sent tanks
and armored personnel carriers after them. An estimated 12,000
men were engaged in the operation. Hundreds of peasants fled
their mountain villages for fear they would fall victim to errant
air and artillery strikes. On one occasion, journalists in clearly
marked cars came under air attack on the outskirts of San Cristobal,
an incident senior Interior Ministry official Eloy Cantu later
declared to be "very regrettable." No one was injured.
</p>
<p> Military operations were complemented by an international propaganda
siege whose principal aim seemed to be to downplay the Chiapas
uprising by attributing it to outside agitators. In one statement,
the Interior Ministry said disaffected Chiapas citizens had
been been "manipulated" and even forced to participate in the
rebellion by "violent factions" from neighboring Guatemala and
El Salvador.
</p>
<p> Cantu went so far as to point out to the press that Comandante
Marcos had green eyes and blond hair and spoke four languages,
the suggestion being that only a foreigner could have such attributes.
Soldiers claimed to have captured a Guatemalan fighting with
the insurgents, but all evidence points to an indigenous uprising
fueled by frustration with Chiapas' economic and social stagnation.
</p>
<p> The government last week made a belated effort to address Chiapas'
grievances, sending in 20 tons of food and promising a $1 million
advance on Chiapas' 1994 allocation from Solidarity, Salinas'
much ballyhooed public works program, which in the past four
years has contributed $11 billion to rebuilding Mexico's crumbling
infrastructure. The government also sent in a team to discuss
the many land claims by peasants against the region's ranchers
and coffee growers.
</p>
<p> As the insurgency wound down, Salinas' concerns were twofold:
that the Chiapas fighting would discourage new investment and
that it would give a boost to opposition presidential candidate
Cuauhtemoc Cardenas in elections scheduled for August. Cardenas
came close to defeating Salinas five years ago and unseating
the ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party (P.R.I.) from power
for the first time since its formation in 1929. But he is given
little chance this time, in part because Salinas' handpicked
P.R.I. candidate, Luis Donaldo Colosio, will benefit from the
public exposure he got as administrator of Solidarity.
</p>
<p> Nevertheless, political pundits argue that the uprising will
profoundly change the character of the election debate. "Chiapas
will be something no one can forget," says writer and political
scientist Federico Reyes Heroles. "After this, social policies
will have to be the most important theme, not one of 10 on the
list."
</p>
<p> As for the investment climate, financiers do not expect the
events in Chiapas by themselves to spoil the gold rush. In the
country's volatile financial markets, the initial reaction to
the rebellion was panic. On the Monday after New Year's, the
Bolsa de Valores, Mexico City's stock market, registered its
largest one-day drop ever, falling 100 points. In the following
days, the market more than made up for Monday's losses, with
much of the buying by U.S. and British institutional investors.
"This incident is obviously unfortunate, but I don't think it
will have any impact at all on the interest of U.S. business
in pursuing a strong relationship with Mexico in NAFTA," said
Everett Briggs, president of the Council of the Americas, which
represents about 200 U.S. companies with investments in Latin
America. "Mexico is a very big country. You can have an outbreak
of trouble in one place without a big effect elsewhere."
</p>
<p> Yet the prospect of a renewed rebellion is very much alive in
Chiapas, where most of the insurgents and all their leaders
have escaped into the mountains, where they can redraw their
strategy and prepare to fight again another day.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>