Illegitimate Mexican President not welcome in NZ
Illegitimate Mexican President not welcome in NZ
6th September 2007
In line with the NZ government's commitment to human rights, the NZ Latin American Solidarity Committee is calling on the NZ government to raise the issue of human rights in Oaxaca with President Calderon who is visiting New Zealand.
Mexican President Felipe Calderon Hinojosa who "won" last year's highly contested presidential elections is at present visiting NZ. While Mexico has made the so-called transition to democracy in 2000, its human rights record continues to be appalling. Calderon has continued to pursue the PAN government's hard-line policy towards peaceful protesters and demonstrators, especially in the Southern regions of Mexico, such as Oaxaca and Chiapas (see Amnesty International statement below).
The NZ Latin
American Solidarity Committee is also asking Mexican
Ambassador to pass on our concerns
to President
Calderon. Recent reports from members in the area, indicate
new significant human rights violations, including
detentions of foreign human rights observers.
The
continued harassment of indigenous populations in Oaxaca as
well as in Chiapas by the national army, as well as
paramilitary forces, has left the people in permanent
state of emergency with no resources for their basic needs.
The Mexican government is not offering alternatives that
include indigenous populations. In addition, the NAFTA
agreement and its further expansion, is depriving people of
the opportunity of land and self-reliance in local food and
crops, that was the case over the last thousand years until
the recent neo-liberal reforms.
“Impunity entrenched in Oaxaca City
More than a year after José Jiménez
Colmenares was shot dead during
a peaceful demonstration
in Oaxaca City, Mexico, his killers remain at
liberty. No
one has been charged with his murder, despite the fact
that
demonstrators handed over gun shell casings and
several suspects –
including two state police officers
– to the authorities on the day he died.
The
prosecuting authorities failed to preserve the crime scene
and
released the suspects. José Jiménez Colmen’s wife
said she was told to
come back when she had collected
sufficient evidence to prosecute.
In mid-2006, what began
as a strike by teachers over pay and conditions
escalated
into widespread demonstrations. A popular
support
movement – the Popular Assembly of the People
of Oaxaca (APPO) – was
formed to support the teachers.
The response of the authorities triggered
a political and
public security crisis which has continued into 2007.
At
least 18 people were killed in the unrest. Scores more
were
injured and hundreds were detained and ill-treated.
Many of those
detained were charged on the basis of
fabricated evidence and
convicted following unfair
trials.
Across Oaxaca, human rights violations committed
during the
upheavals in 2006 are being compounded by a
failure to bring those
responsible to justice and a
systemic disregard for the rights of victims
and their
families.
Reports say 140 people were detained on that
day, after a peaceful
APPO demonstration ended in violent
clashes.
The National Human Rights Commission found that
at least 13 of
those detained were tortured by State
Judicial Police and Federal
Preventive Police.
The
response of the authorities to the demands for justice by
the
victims of human rights violations has been
characterized by inertia,
incompetence and obstruction.
Journalists, relatives and human
rights defenders who
have tried to pursue cases and expose the truth
have been
threatened.
At every stage of the investigative and
judicial process the quest
for truth has been thwarted.
In most cases crime scenes were not
preserved and
evidence was not gathered promptly.
Not all protests were
peaceful, and the authorities have a duty
to maintain
public order and protect the public. However,
such
challenges do not diminish their obligation to
uphold national and
international human rights law. Nor
can they excuse impunity for
human rights
abuses.”
ends