March 2000
Inside Mexico's student strike
The nine-month student strike which shut down Mexico's National Autonomous
University, or UNAM, was broken up by the federal police Feb. 6. One of the
leaders of the general strike council, Herendira Tellez, came to the U.S.
to build support for those still in jail or in hiding, after spending two
days in jail herself. Her mission brought Tellez, a student of classical
literature, to the News & Letters office in Chicago. Translating was Jason
Wallach of the Mexico Solidarity Network-Editor
What we are fighting against is the whole neo-liberal program at UNAM. We
are fighting the whole media system, the curriculum, the structure of
student participation at UNAM. We are fighting for what's best for the
university, for the education of everybody and now for the political
prisoners of conscience. All these things are happening at the same time.
On the 11th of February of last year, the president of UNAM put forth a
proposal to raise the tuition at UNAM, so the students began to organize
against this proposal, firstly because it was an illegal proposal. It
violated the third article of the Mexican constitution which guarantees
free education. We have seen that the laws of Mexico are systematically
violated by the government. So school by school and department by
department, the students began to act, but protests weren't effective, so
each school started to work towards a strike.
The authorities never wanted to have a negotiated settlement. There was
never any effort at dialogue. They just kept basically wearing the strikers
down. Every time the students wanted to talk, the government rejected their
efforts.
The students all this time were going out into the streets, talking to the
people, asking for their support for the strike. To do this for 10 months
wasn't easy. We had a whole lot of discipline and a whole lot of
organization within our own ranks, and we got a lot of support from
everyday people, from all aspects of the cultural sector, the other
schools, the faculty.
The communities involved in the strike formed rather naturally. It was kind
of natural the way everybody realized that they were fighting for the same
things and it just happened that they started to work together. They had
seen that after 70 years of PRI (Revolutionary Institutional Party) rule,
they wanted change in whatever form they could get it.
On the 6th of February, the federal police raided the auditorium which we
had renamed Che Guevara Auditorium. There are still some 270 odd people in
jail, and there are a number of people out there wanted by the police. So
we are having to reorganize the strike council based on who's in jail and
who's not. Because we organized this strike from inside each school-UNAM is
so huge that it's divided up by different schools-each school has its own
strike council, and they are having to reorganize each school.
This Monday (Feb. 15) the school student assemblies met again, but most of
the students didn't come to study. They talked to people about
restructuring the strike. They have a lot of support from the teachers in
this because they know that students are not going to enjoy the luxury of
studying while other students are political prisoners. Because of this
there have been almost no classes.
The labor unions are really helping out, and even sometimes the campesino
unions which is really amazing because they are so poor. Last Wednesday
(Feb. 9) there was a big protest to support the strikers. There were more
than 200,000 people-workers, students, campesinos.
The parents of the students have been important supporters. The majority of
those parents lived through '68 when they saw many students gunned down,
many of them their comrades at the time. Nobody wants to repeat that. So
they are willing to support their jailed kids in this fight.
In fact, this was only the second time police have entered the university
since 1968 because in 1977 there was a strike of university workers for a
wage increase. After two months the police crushed it. That strike was by
STUNAM, the union of support workers, secretaries, building cleaners, and
grounds keepers.
Because we are aware that the intent of the government is to repress, to
crush any ideas, any movement of the students, we have been strong. We know
the reality of the situation. We are doing this to show the government that
we are willing to fight to defend our rights and human rights in general.
That's also why the students are calling for support of other political
prisoners throughout Mexico like at Cerro Hueco, not just for the rights of
students.
SOLIDARITY WITH ZAPATISTAS, OTHERS
All of the cases of people who are fighting for freedom and justice
interest us. On the 11th of December we had a march and part of that was
for the freedom of Mumia Abu-Jamal. That was a big day for everybody in
Mexico. On Dec. 11 we responded, 10 days after, to the Seattle events. The
strikers went to the U.S. consulate. A big part of it was marching for
Mumia Abu-Jamal, on behalf of him, and they were doing it in the spirit of
Seattle, against the WTO.
Since '94 I have been involved with Zapatista solidarity and a lot the
students in the high schools and junior high schools have supported the
Zapatista movement. Before the strike started, we were always meeting, so
we were some of the people that helped initiate the strike. We also helped
to start the organization that eventually became the strike council.
To see the connection between the Zapatistas and UNAM, you have to look at
the Mexican system of power. The government tried to avoid resolving
problems both at UNAM and with the Zapatistas. In the same way they
disregard the San Andres accords in Chiapas from Feb. 16, 1996, they
disregard the agreements of Dec. 10 with the CGH, the strike council.
We have grown, and we have grown in ways more than if we had 10 months of
classes. Now we know more about the political system in Mexico. We
understand more about the other issues that are happening around Mexico,
with the political prisoners, the repression against indigenous people and,
of course, our own direct experience.
Our political perspective has changed a huge amount. We say that all the
political parties are submerged in the political system, and that this
whole system needs to be changed and these parties are not going to have an
effect.
NEW KINDS OF ORGANIZING
Since the beginning, the strikers have been conscious of the ways that the
Zapatistas have organized. So it has always been everybody's equal and
everybody has equal voice in the movement. It's always been more of a
horizontal leadership. It's not just one person leading the movement. It's
the activity of all the people who are involved.
It's not that we're all going to talk to the president to negotiate, but
we're all cooking the same food together for each other. We all have to
share in both the intellectual and the manual work. To do this we have had
to insist on democratic forms of decision making. We don't consider whether
a proposal comes from a man or from a woman. We look at what are the best
ideas. That's one of the best things about the strike.
It's true that in the past there has been a lot of division between men and
women in different strikes, but in this strike, we broke with that
tradition. The system is organized against having democratic structures
being effective. We want to demonstrate that the types of repression that
the government has and its types of structures aren't necessary, that we
can create something that's different than the current system.
We are here to tell the truth about what is really happening with this
strike. Of course, we want our companeros in jail to be freed-that is the
real message because the international community has the ability to affect
their freedom. We want to talk to everybody who believes in justice and
democracy and to grab their ears to generate this pressure.
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