Posted on 12/29/2002 1:26:01 PM PST by FITZ
MEXICO CITY (AP) -- There's a Pancho Villa revival going on, but it's not the books, the new Antonio Banderas movie or the nostalgia wave that worries some Mexicans. It's the real-life reawakening of Villa's violence.
Rising social unrest swept to the pinnacles of power Dec. 10 when protesters on horseback broke down the ornate wooden doors of Congress and surged into the lower legislative chamber to demand subsidies for farmers and pay raises for teachers.
The protest was reminiscent of Villa's sweep across northern Mexico in the 1910-17 revolution, when he and his pistol-packing, horse-riding soldiers would burst through the gates of elegant haciendas to loot the rich landowners.
The invasion stunned lawmakers. The time for such violence is long past, all parties agreed - even Mexico's leftist Democratic Revolution Party, which itself has flirted with violent demonstrations and rebellions.
"These violent pressure tactics are not the way to solve society's just demands," Democratic Revolution congressional leader Jesus Ortega said.
To some Mexicans, though, Villa remains a hero and his methods still appeal. Few embody Mexico's chaotic violence, devil-may-care attitude, sense of rough justice and spontaneous rebellion as much as the revolutionary leader.
His image has gone commercial, with restaurants from San Francisco to Moscow adopting Villa's name or grinning face as trademarks. New Mexico even has a state park named for Villa - at the site of the 1916 raid where Villa's men crossed into the United States and killed 18 Americans.
The Antonio Banderas movie now in production in Mexico, "And Starring Pancho Villa as Himself," is expected to be a largely sympathetic view.
Recent writings like historian Freidrich Katz's 1998 two-volume biography, "The Life and Times of Pancho Villa," have cast the revolutionary as a social crusader who cut taxes and built schools during his brief time in power.
"Pancho Villa is synonymous with the fight against injustice," said Adolfo Lopez, a Mexico City assemblyman who in 1988 founded a rough-and-tumble slum group named the Francisco Villa Popular Front to fight for affordable housing.
The modern-day Villistas built a reputation by battling cops at stick-wielding demonstrations, hijacking buses, blocking traffic and leading squatters in illegal occupations of housing lots.
Lopez defends the group's tactics. "Given a choice between dying of hunger and dying with a rifle in your hand, a lot of people will choose the latter," he said.
But the group also copies some of Villa's less savory aspects. It uses iron-handed leadership to urge poorly educated troops into violence, with little explanation of what they are fighting for.
Pancho Villa's soldiers often shrugged when asked why they took up arms, and Lopez's followers at demonstrations often answer with a similar "We haven't been told yet."
In July, the Popular Front provided key support for a peasant uprising in Atenco, a town east of Mexico City threatened by a proposed airport. Villa would have been right at home: Machete-wielding farmers on horseback took hostages and hijacked gasoline tankers and threatened to blow them up.
The uprising succeeded in derailing the airport project, but it also deeply divided residents, lost the town all government funds, and installed a relatively undemocratic rebel council in power.
In southern Chiapas state, where small-scale farmers fear being overwhelmed by a looming free trade in farm produce, Zapatista rebels have taken to hanging Villa's portrait beside their own namesake, revolutionary leader Emiliano Zapata.
The debate over Villa is still very much alive in Mexico, in part because the conditions he fought against are still here: a vast poor separated from a wealthy elite.
Critics say Mexico's conservative government may have brought fuller democracy to the country, but there has been little social change. That, for them, makes Villa the right man for the times.
But times have changed. Government leaders now choose negotiation over armed conflict, such as when they gave into Atenco residents' demands to stop the airport.
"You can't live in the past," said the Democratic Revolution Party's secretary-general, Carlos Navarrete. "We can't resolve present-day problems with rifles, bullets and machetes anymore. Now we have political parties, courts and legislatures to do that."
But what happens when they won't solve any problems? Fox is going to bring Mexico to disaster.
Now that would be a job worthy of the CIA, foment a Mexican revolution.
Hundreds of thousands of campesinos would disagree with you.
Mexican Farmers See Death Sentence in NAFTA
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by Pav Jordan
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YECAPIXTLA, Mexico - Cirilo Yanez has been farming sorghum in the sleepy Mexican town of Yecapixtla his whole life, but he expects to be forced out of the business after a new phase of the North American Free Trade Agreement comes into effect on Jan. 1. "As long as I've been alive, I have been in sorghum, as were my parents and as are my children," said the weathered Yanez, 62, who farms seven acres of the grain in central Morelos state and sells it as livestock feed. On the first day of 2003, protective tariffs on imports of sorghum and most other farm goods will disappear under NAFTA and cheaper U.S. imports are expected to flood into Mexico and dominate market share. Yanez says that even now, with protective tariffs on imports, he and other Mexican producers cannot compete with cheaper U.S.-produced sorghum, which is used in snack and baked products, to produce ethanol and as animal feed. Mexican farmers, many of whom till small plots with donkeys and follow ancient traditions such as sowing seeds barefoot, cannot compete with U.S. machinery or infrastructure and, ultimately, in price. In January, import tariffs on apples, wheat, sorghum, rice, soy and many other farm products will drop to zero, from between 1 percent and 2 percent now, in the second phase of trade liberalization between NAFTA members Canada, Mexico and the United States. Chicken and pork imports will see tariffs lowered more drastically, from as high as 49 percent in the case of poultry. Four other products, including powdered milk, corn and beans will get five more years of protection before tariffs go to zero in 2008. DEATH SENTENCE? Producers see a death sentence in the agricultural chapters of NAFTA, signed a decade ago and implemented since 1994, and blame the Mexican government for not preparing them for free trade. "The governments of the recent past and of the present have refused to assume the commitment of rural development; they have refused to assume the responsibility of promoting agricultural activities, as it has been much more comfortable for them to be simple spectators," legislators said in a recent document sent to Mexican President Vicente Fox as part of a petition for more protection of the agriculture sector. "The countryside is being abandoned," said Sergio Ramirez, a sorghum farmer from Yecapixtla, a tiny farming pueblo some 50 miles south of Mexico City. He said he believes he will soon be yet another casualty of NAFTA. Ramirez said more and more sorghum farmers have abandoned their lands in the area since Mexico entered NAFTA because they could not compete with their U.S. counterparts, blessed with economies of scale most Mexican farmers can only dream about. The average farm size per Mexican farmer is between five and seven acres, whereas U.S. and Canadian farmers' properties are normally over 250 acres each. Critics say that, other than some fantastic success stories in fruits and vegetables, the Mexican farm sector is unable to compete virtually across the board. "The Mexican countryside is becoming deserted. Many have gone already," Yanez said. He said disillusioned farmers usually make their way into Mexico City where they do bit jobs, or cross illegally into the United States to find work. The government says it will not attempt to renegotiate NAFTA, but it has announced subsidies to protect some farmers. In November the government announced about $3 billion in agricultural subsidies meant to lower costs and guarantee minimum prices for Mexican farmers in some products amid heightened competition from U.S. farm goods. The subsidies were part of a record 102.6 billion pesos ($10.09 billion) in farm aid for 2003 to support electricity and diesel fuel costs and to offer competitive financing to the struggling agricultural sector. That compares to some $190 billion in U.S. farm subsidies over the next 10 years. The measures have been criticized by many who say the aid is not enough and who speculate it will likely get siphoned off in bureaucratic expenses and by sticky-fingered officials. Some farmers say the aid will never get to the small campesino producers and that it is destined in fact for the large farmers who did manage to boost production efficiency during NAFTA's nascent years. Mexican farmers are suffering what the rest of the developing world has been screaming about, their inability to compete with U.S. and European farm subsidies. MEXICO ILL PREPARED Tariffs have been lowered gradually since 1994, when the treaty went into effect for Mexico, and many question why Mexican farmers are not prepared, and why they are making such a fuss, if they had eight years to prepare for the 2003 opening. Still others say not much will change on Jan. 1. A top U.S. agriculture official said in late November that Mexico could have readied itself more for tariff-free borders. "We're a little perplexed that the campesino groups would come in and say, 'Oh my God, we're going to be destroyed. Come 2003, January 1, the flood gates open,"' a U.S. government official told Reuters. "And our point is, well, no, nothing's really changed." The official, who asked not to be identified, said the only area of real concern at the start of next year was in poultry, which would be unable to handle a zero-tariff imports after protection of 49 percent this year and more than 90 percent last year. "And we're working with the government of Mexico on poultry just so we can try to reduce the sharp impact," he said. "They did feel that they were unprepared to compete. In fact they can't." The U.S. Embassy in Mexico City was a target in recent weeks for protests from farmers demanding the Jan. 1 border opening be postponed, or that NAFTA be renegotiated. Other protests saw the lower house of Congress blockaded by farmers from around the country who rode into the city on horseback, leading cows behind them, to demand more government protection from U.S. competitors in the new year. |
Because ... what's good for General Bullmoose is good for the U.S.A.
Throughout history the upper classes have had only one interest. The maintenance of their status and guaranteeing that the peasantry never rises to threaten that status or that of their progeny.
The real division in the world always has been class. In the end that matters more than race, religion or nationality.
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