- National Action Party (PAN) candidate Felipe Calderon
had center stage at 12:01 AM, December 1 at the presidential residence
of Los Pinos as Mexico's new president addressed the country on national
television after a brief stealth swearing-in ceremony for him to the office
he didn't win and will now assume illegitimately because of the fraud-laden
electoral coup d'etat that gave it to him. He then had to be slipped in
a back door of the Congress later that morning to take the oath of office
there, as constitutionally required, in a second "lightning-fast"
chaotic ceremony preceded by a brawl between lawmakers for and against
the new president who then left as fast as he entered and is now off to
a rocky start.
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- At the same time, outside in Mexico City's streets, hundreds
of thousands of people assembled early in the morning in the vast Zocalo
square supporting opposition Democratic Revolution Party (PRD) candidate
Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who changed his earlier plans to march on
Congress and instead held a peaceful mass-protest march of his supporters
through the city center to avoid clashes with the police that might have
turned violent. It went as far as Chapultepec Park, the entrance to the
secured area, to demonstrate opposition to Mr. Calderon and to support
Lopez Obrador who was denied the presidency he won now handed over illegitimately
to Mr. Calderon. Obrador told the crowd his fight will continue because
"it is not possible that there are no democratic elections in Mexico.
We are not rebels without a cause, like the media want to portray us. Sometimes
they forget the real issue at hand, they forget that we were robbed of
the presidential election."
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- Earlier on Tuesday, November 28, opposition legislators
occupied the speaker's podium in the Parliament's Chamber of Deputies lower
house where Calderon was scheduled to be sworn in as is customary. They
remained there, humiliating Mr. Calderon and forcing him first to settle
for a well-guarded private bewitching hour ceremony, unprecedented in the
country's history, and then have to repeat it in the brawling environment
of the lower house and mass-opposition controlled anger in the streets
outside. Not a good way to begin a presidency that may not get any easier
ahead. It led the Council on Hemispheric Affairs (COHA) on December 1 to
write an article with the long and ominous title - "With Calderon's
Deeply Troubled Inauguration Last Night, Amidst a Deteriorating Security
Situation in Oaxaca, the Possibility of a New Mexican Revolution Cannot
Be Ruled Out." What COHA didn't say was that it appears that revolution
may have already begun and is beginning to spread slowly throughout most
parts of the country where "the people the color of the earth"
live and are now demanding their rights.
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- In the earlier wee-hours ceremony COHA referred to, Calderon
was presented the tri-color ceremonial sash by outgoing PAN president Vincente
Fox, and it now remains to be seen what he can do with it as he assumes
his new office in a weakened position against an opposition with vast support
determined to continue resisting his legitimacy. For weeks following the
fraud-laden July 2 general election, mass protests filled the streets of
Mexico City and its vast Zocalo square.
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- The struggle continued in an atmosphere of post-election
turmoil that energized the Mexican public including the courageous people
of Oaxaca who've been battling since May for the rights they've long been
denied including the removal of the corrupt and repressive state governor
Ulises Ruiz and united to do it by forming the Popular Assembly of the
People of Oaxaca (APPO). They're now faced off against 4500 of the country's
Federal Preventative Police (PFP) and thuggish paramilitary assassins sent
to the state to target them. Still, they've stood their ground bravely
in their determined confrontation that shows no signs of ending despite
brutal police harassment on the streets with tear-gassing, illegal home
searches and seizures, people disappeared, many dozens or hundreds illegally
arrested for protesting injustice and falsely accused of "hindering
free passage, sedition, criminal association, conspiracy, theft, rebellion,
and threats" and at least 17 killed including American documentary
filmmaker and journalist Brad Will and dozens wounded.
-
- Weeks before the early morning stealth inauguration in
Mexico City, the ruling PAN party set up a militarized zone around the
Chamber of Deputies in the capital preparing for whatever might unfold
in the run-up to December 1 and its aftermath still to come. The area was
turned into an armed camp with 1200 elite PFP in riot gear along with Police
of the Presidential Guard manning checkpoints in the surrounding streets
in an atmosphere of martial law that persists and may signal trouble ahead
on the streets of Mexico City similar to what's now happening in Oaxaca
and beginning to spread elsewhere.
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- In addition, three-meter high metal fences were erected
around the Chamber of Deputies building and remain in place, closing it
off like a fortress needing protection from the people of Mexico the elected
leaders are supposed to represent but never do in a country with a long
tradition of authoritarian rule, corruption, dismissiveness of peoples'
rights, and service only to the interests of wealth and power. The scene
there represents an ominous symbol of state repression past and more likely
to come that Felipe Calderon signaled on November 20 when he said: "My
government will make use of all the force of the Mexican state, with the
laws at hand and the power of the institutions. This is a war that we are
going to win..."
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- Straightaway, this man shows he means it by his appointment
of Jalisco Governor Francisco Ramirez Acuna to the powerful post of Interior
Minister that effectively puts him in charge of state-directed repression.
He assumes his new office with a well-earned reputation in his home state
as a hard line authoritarian known for cracking down on protesters and
imprisoning dissidents while, at the same time, allowing narco-traffickers
and criminal entrepreneurs safe haven under his jurisdiction and benefitting
along with them.
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- He, Mr. Calderon, and others in the new government will
get plenty of support for what they have in mind from the Bush administration.
It has its eye on exploiting all remaining parts of Mexico it hasn't yet
gotten its hands on since it grabbed so much of it from the IMF-imposed
structural adjustment policies of the 1980s that resulted in large-scale
privatizations of state-owned industries, economic deregulation favorable
to Washington, and mandated wage restraint that held pay increases below
the rate of inflation whenever any were gotten at all.
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- Calderon and Bush will also be close allies working together
to further the business gains already in place from the destructive 1994
NAFTA agreement that predatory corporate giants benefitted hugely from
and now want to broaden into a North American union, effectively erasing
the borders of the three NAFTA-participating countries and surrendering
the sovereignty of the two smaller ones to the hegemony of the one dominant
one, adversely affecting the people of all three countries who always end
up the losers in deals like this, if it happens.
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- If the opposition in Mexico has any say about it, post-election
schemes cooked up by the PAN in service to its dominant northern neighbor
may not go as planned. Opposition PRD candidate Lopez Obrador (ALMO, as
he's affectionately known) promises to resist the new illegitimate government,
and on November 20 (the anniversary date of Mexico's 1910 revolution) conducted
his own swearing-in ceremony in Mexico City's Zocalo as Mexico's "legitimate
president" before hundreds of thousands of supporters. He named his
cabinet members joining him and told the crowd "There are millions
of Mexicans who are not willing to accept more abuses (and that his) legitimate
government (would work for the poor)." He added Mr. Calderon (he calls
a US "puppet") "cannot feel secure (in the office he didn't
win and he's) the lowly servant of the white-collar criminals (who stole
it for him)." He also presented 20 measures he intends to work for
including preventing the privatization of the nation's energy sector Big
US Oil has long eyed to control.
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- The battle lines are now drawn and began peacefully on
the streets near the Parliament building on December 1 in response to Lopez
Obrador asking his supporters to come out in them in protest with more
sure to follow. Security forces have been there for months and will be
aligned against them whenever they're in the streets or square and were
joined by hundreds of Navy officers deployed around the Parliament, at
least for the inauguration, already protected by several thousand elite
police and members of the Presidential Guard. This was just day one of
round one as Felipe Calderon begins his potentially turbulent six-year
term in office that may hold many surprises as it unfolds.
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- The people of Mexico have shown they're fed up with decades
of fraud, corruption and abuse and for months have taken to the streets
in numbers large enough to make a difference and for the world to take
note. They're joined in protest by their comrades in Oaxaca, other states,
and by Subcomandante Marcos and the many thousands of his supporters and
organizations across the country. He's leading them in his national Zapatista
Other Campaign organized outside the political process to end Mexico's
unjust economic system of neoliberal predatory capitalism wanting to replace
it with a democratic system of social and economic justice for the people
in a country long denied either.
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- Events ebb and flow south of the border, but overall
the atmosphere's electric and more ripe for change now than it's been since
Emiliano Zapata Salazar's heroic efforts led a national revolutionary movement
against the Porfirio Diaz dictatorship in 1910 that overthrew him the following
year. It was historic and now is a symbol of what courageous people hope
will ignite a new spirit of resistance leading to change in what may be
a watershed moment in Mexico's history.
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- It it happens, it won't come without struggle. Mexican
governments aren't known for yielding easily to protests against their
authority, and this one can expect plenty of help from the Bush administration
already reeling from the opposition it faces in a growing number of Latin
American nations and sure to become more hostile and determined to resist
new threats in the region as they arise. For Washington, Mexico is the
cornerstone of the hemisphere it feels it has a lien on and losing it would
be another catastrophic blow adding to its strategic defeats in the Middle
East brought on by the Bush administration's arrogance, blunders and ineptness.
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- The people of Mexico have other ideas, they're now playing
out in real time, and as events ahead unfold it may be that Mexican history
will be made in the hearts of the people and the spirit they show in the
streets they take to and not in the halls of power where it usually happens.
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- Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com.{\rtf1\mac\ansicpg10000\cocoartf824
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