Concejo Indígena de Gobierno
(Español) Denuncia de invasión a los trabajaderos de la comunidad de Nuevo San Gregorio
San Cristóbal de las Casas, Chiapas, México.
A 3 de febrero del 2021.
A las Juntas de Buen Gobierno y Bases de Apoyo del E.Z.L.N.
Al Ejército Zapatista de Liberación Nacional.
Al Concejo Indígena de Gobierno.
Al Congreso Nacional Indígena.
A las Redes de Resistencias y Rebeldías
A los organismos de derechos humanos nacionales e internacionales.
A los medios libres, independientes, autónomos o como se llamen.
A los medios de comunicación nacionales e internacionales.
A la opinión pública.
A la sociedad civil organizada.
El día 1 de febrero del 2021, mientras la Caravana de Solidaridad realizaba su trabajo de acompañamiento a las Bases de Apoyo del Ejército Zapatista de Liberación Nacional (BAEZLN) de la comunidad de Nuevo San Gregorio, se documentó la presencia del grupo invasor en los trabajaderos, por lo cual las BAEZLN decidieron suspender la siembra de maíz y frijol que se tenía planeada.
Esta nueva invasión, además de obstaculizar el trabajo en el campo, actividad fundamental para la supervivencia de las familias, también impide que se le pueda dar alimento a los animales y el regreso de las BAEZLN a sus casas, ya que tienen que cruzar por el espacio en donde se instaló el grupo invasor.
Como caravana de Solidaridad, consideramos que esta acción es una agresión a la autonomía alimentaria y el derecho a la tierra. Estos son los mismos mecanismos de invasión que se vienen utilizando desde el mes de noviembre del 2019 [1] por parte del grupo invasor, y es una de las razones de la presencia de la Caravana de Solidaridad.
Las y los pobladores de la comunidad de Nuevo San Gregorio, Municipio Autónomo de Lucio Cabañas, identificaron entre el grupo invasor a las siguientes personas; del poblado de San Gregorio Las Casas: Nicolás Pérez Pérez, Sebastián Bolom Ara, Pedro Hernández Gómez, Alejandro Pérez Huet, Nicolás Moshán Huet y Sebastián Ara Moshán. Del Duraznal: Javier Gómez Pérez, Manuela Moshán Huacash, Miguel Gómez Méndez y Pedro Pérez Pérez. De Rancho Alegre a Felípe Enríquez Gómez y de San Andrés Puerto Rico a Miguel Moshán Huey y Manuel Moshán Moshán.
Como lo hemos mencionado anteriormente, esta caravana de solidaridad está integrada por organizaciones, colectivos y personas a título individual, Adherentes a la Sexta Declaración de la Selva Lacandona, reafirmamos que nuestra misión es la solidaridad con las BAEZLN, y la documentación como parte del trabajo pacífico que venimos haciendo para que se respeten los derechos humanos de las BAEZLN. En cada salida de esta caravana se ha contado con el acompañamiento y observación de derechos humanos de el Centro de Derechos Humanos Fray Bartolomé de las Casas (Frayba), para garantizar también nuestra integridad y respeto a nuestros derechos humanos.
Les pedimos estar atentas y atentos, difundir los sucesos y hacer un llamado a las instancias correspondientes.
Atentamente:
Centro de Derechos de la Mujer Chiapas, A.C. (CDMCH).
Desarrollo Económico y Social de los Mexicanos Indígenas, A.C. (DESMI).
Desarrollo Tecnológico y Servicios Comunitarios El Puente, S.C.
Enlace Civil, A.C.
Espacio de Lucha Contra el Olvido y la Represión (ELCOR).
Grupo de trabajo No Estamxs Todxs.
Lumaltik Herriak.
Médicos del Mundo, Suiza-México.
Memoria Viva.
Promedios de Comunicación Comunitaria A.C.
Red de Resistencia y Rebeldía Ajmaq.
Salud y Desarrollo Comunitario, A.C. (SADEC).
BIZILUR.
TxiapasEKIN Plataforma.
Y otros Colectivos, organizaciones y personas adherentes a la Sexta Declaración de la Selva Lacandona.
Invitation to the Fifth National Assembly of the National Indigenous Congress
INVITATION TO THE
FIFTH NATIONAL ASSEMBLY OF THE NATIONAL INDIGENOUS CONGRESS
The indigenous peoples, nations, tribes and neighborhoods that make up the National Indigenous Congress, the Indigenous Governing Council, and the Zapatista Army for National Liberation, in the face of the disease which affects our Mother Earth and is expressed as a serious pandemic and which has dealt a blow to the life and economy of our communities and the entire world, hear ourselves in the voice of the originary peoples who cry out from the geographies where they resist and struggle against the capitalist war that tries to take over indigenous and rural territories. This war is waged through aggressive extractivist policies across the whole national territory as well as through megaprojects of death: the Interoceanic Highway in the states of Oaxaca and Veracruz, the Integral Project for Morelos in the states of Morelos, Puebla and Tlaxcala, the Mayan Train in the states of the Mexican Southeast, and the Mexico City International Airport in the center of the country. It operates through the implementation of a combination of policies and mechanisms for the continuation of “free trade” subordinated to the United States and Canada, policies which are also aimed at containing migration. It seeks to stop or debilitate the organization and resistance of our peoples by supplanting our traditional authorities and holding staged indigenous consultations.
These policies and megaprojects are driven by the neoliberal government of the Fourth Transformation[1] in the service of global capital and against the autonomous organization of our peoples. All the above is being achieved through the militarization of the country (through creation and deployment of the National Guard and the militarization of the entire national territory), the complicity of the criminal cartel-states, the creation of programs that try to rupture communal organization, as is the case with Sembrando Vida[2], and the passage of laws favorable to large transnational business consortia, such as the Federal Law for the Promotion and Protection of Native Corn.
The CNI and CIG together with the Zapatista communities, acting as a congress when we are together and a network when we are apart, are that collective word that we make our own: we weave ourselves together in and through this word, determined that our resistance grow as large as the capitalist threat to life.
For our peoples there is no option to give in, give up, or sell out, when it’s Mother Earth and life itself that the governments, businesses, militaries and drug cartels want to take as spoils of war.
WHEREAS:
- There is an intensification of the repression, threats, formation of shock troops and criminalization of communities that resist the Integrated Project for Morelos, which the bad federal government decided to impose illegally with the use of its armed shock troops called the National Guard; nevertheless, the heroic legacy of Samir Flores Soberanes is kept alive by the sisters and brothers of the Popular Front in Defense of Land and Water in Morelos, Puebla, and Tlaxcala, who don’t give in, give up, or sell out.
- The war is escalating against the autonomous and originary communities of the CNI in the state of Chiapas. Meanwhile the governments guarantee impunity for the paramilitary groups they finance and which attack the towns and their sister communities day and night.
- The bad federal government, together with its armed forces, is spreading fear and terror in shameless alliance with shadowy economic interests that intend to take over the territories of indigenous peoples and peasants. It cynically violates laws, court rulings, and court-ordered suspensions in order to impose its megaprojects that hand over the national territory to transnational economic interests.
- Resistance and rebellion are growing in the geographies of the originary peoples as dispossession and violent repression grow, perpetrated by the bad government at all levels together with paramilitary and narco-paramilitary groups that make possible their extractive and polluting projects. In the big cities, too, our peoples are resisting as demonstrated by the Otomí community in Mexico City.
- As originary peoples, from the struggles that we are, we see that sparks of hope are igniting against this war which is the same around the world, and from distant geographies we turn toward each other, toward the struggle for life, which forms a language through which we recognize one another.
- The EZLN has issued a convocation to begin a world tour in April of 2021, starting in Europe, and the CNI is invited to form a delegation to accompany this journey and bring our collective word.
WE INVITE the delegates and councilmembers of the CNI-CIG to the:
FIFTH NATIONAL ASSEMBLY OF THE NATIONAL INDIGENOUS CONGRESS AND THE INDIGENOUS GOVERNING COUNCIL
To take place in
LA QUINTA PIEDRA, RECUPERATED TERRITORY OF THE NAHUA COMMUNITY OF THE TEPOZTLÁN EJIDO, MORELOS
23-24 JANUARY, 2021
With the following program:
23 January:
Inauguration
Working groups:
- Assessment of the dispossession and the capitalist war being waged against our peoples
- Proposal for the participation of a delegation from the CNI-CIG in the Zapatista world tour
24 January:
Open Plenary:
- Conclusion of working groups
- Agreements and resolutions
- Public communiqué
- Closing
Note 1: Given the current health circumstances we invite each town, community or indigenous organization, whichever applies, to nominate one or two delegates, with the goal of having an assembly that is widely representative while being smaller in numbers. Those who attend should comply with the measures of wearing a face mask, maintaining a safe distance and frequently washing their hands and face as well as any measures implemented during the meeting.
Note 2: Persons who are not delegates or councilmembers of the CNI/CIG will only be allowed to attend the assembly with an express invitation from the Coordinating and Monitoring Commission.
Sincerely,
December, 2020
For the Full Reconstitution of Our Peoples
Never Again a Mexico Without Us
National Indigenous Congress-Indigenous Governing Council
Zapatista Army for National Liberation
[1] The López Obrador campaign deemed its governing project the “Fourth Transformation” (4T), supposedly on par with historic events such as Mexican Independence (1810), a period of reform in the mid-19th century, and the Mexican Revolution (1910).
[2] Sembrando Vida (Sowing the Seeds of Life) is a government program developed under the López Obrador administration that claims to create jobs in local communities through the planting of trees.