MEXICAN
FARMERS
PROTEST NAFTA HARDSHIPS
(The
following article is from
the February 16-29,
2008
issue of People's Voice, Canada's leading communist newspaper. Articles
can be reprinted free if the source is credited. Subscription rates in
Canada: $25/year, or $12 low income rate; for U.S. readers - $25 US per
year; other overseas readers - $25 US or $35 CDN per year. Send to:
People's Voice, c/o PV Business Manager, 133 Herkimer St. Unit 502,
Hamilton,
ON, L8P 2H3.)
By Emile Schepers, People's Weekly
World Newspaper
Mexico's President Felipe Calderon is moving to implement a new wave of
"neoliberal" policies which are being repudiated by numerous other
Latin American countries.
Calderon, of the conservative National Action
Party, PAN, was elected in 2006 by a tiny margin, in a vote that the
opposition claims was fraudulent. Backed by the Bush administration, he
has pushed boldly to implement a more radical program of "free" trade,
privatization and union-busting.
Mexican farmers are angry about Calderon's
refusal to heed their demand to renegotiate agricultural clauses of the
North American Free Trade Agreement, NAFTA. On Jan. 1, all import
tariffs on U.S. corn, beans, sugar and powdered milk were eliminated,
and the Mexican farmers claim that this is going to wipe out the
livelihoods of perhaps a million more rural Mexicans.
Farmers from across the country made their way
to the capital city for Feb. 1 protests, some walking for 1,000 miles,
Bloomberg News reported. As tractors led a huge parade of protesters, a
herd of cows, tended by dairy farmers angry over low milk prices,
waited in a makeshift pen in a traffic circle.
Farmers and farm activists chanted, "Without
corn, the country doesn't exist!" as they marched. Protesters want
Mexico to keep its "food sovereignty," the International Herald Tribune
reported.
Corn in particular has terrific dietary and
symbolic value for the Mexican people, having been first domesticated
in prehistoric Mexico, associated with religious belief systems of
indigenous Mexicans, and the subject of struggles for land reforms and
rural justice throughout modern Mexican history.
On Jan. 11, 1,000 members of the Sonora State
Police and the Federal Protective Police pounced on mine gate pickets
at the Grupo Mexico Corporation's enormous Cananea copper mine. The
mine and steel workers' union has been on strike for several months
against the Grupo Mexico management over safety conditions. On the same
day, a government labour arbitration board declared the strike to be
illegal. The union responded with work stoppages in more than 80
places, and also went to court and got the "illegal" ruling of the
labour board reversed. But the company has brought in scabs and claims
it is getting ready to resume production.
The Cananea mine has huge symbolic value for
the Mexican people. In 1906, there was a violent conflict at the same
mine when Mexican miners went on strike against the U.S. owners, an
incident which was considered a precursor of the Mexican Revolution of
1910-1920. Furthermore, to use government police forces to stop a
strike flies in the face of Mexican labour law, and is a sharp
escalation of "class struggle from above."
Now comes an announcement by the Halliburton
corporation that it had signed a $683 million contract with the Mexican
national oil company, PEMEX, to drill 58 new test holes, and to take
over maintenance of pipelines. This is the latest of $2 billion in
contracts that Halliburton has received from PEMEX during Calderon's
administration and that of his predecessor, Vicente
Fox. The Mexican press was not slow to make the
connection among the Halliburton-PEMEX deal, former Halliburton CEO
Dick Cheney, and the many corruption scandals with which Halliburton is
associated. The opposition complained that if PEMEX now contracts out
such basic functions as drilling wells and maintaining pipelines, it
will become the "public" front for international monopoly capital -
privatization by the back door. It would also undercut the powerful oil
workers union, which several successive Mexican governments have been
trying to weaken.
PEMEX also has very high symbolic value. It
was created starting in 1938, when the revered left wing Mexican
president, Lazaro Cardenas del Rio, nationalized foreign-owned
petroleum operations, after those companies refused to obey progressive
Mexican labour laws. European countries broke off diplomatic relations
and threatened armed intervention. Compensation money was raised by a
massive national effort. Cardenas' wife contributed her jewelry, and
millions of Mexicans contributed coins and even farm produce. So
"privatizing PEMEX" has been seen as the "third rail" of Mexican
politics.
But recently there have been dire warnings
that PEMEX is functioning poorly, and that private corporate investment
in the entity is needed to get it up to shape. Indeed PEMEX has had
many problems. But the opposition claims that there is enough public
money available for modifications needed.
How soon the protests generated by these and
other blows against the Mexican people can combine into a massive
national movement of repudiation of Calderon's policies remains to be
seen. Meanwhile, labour and social justice activists here in the United
States are getting together to organize solidarity for the beleaguered
Mexican workers and farmers.
Found
at:
http://www.peoplesvoice.ca/articleprint12/10_MEXICAN_FARMERS_PROTEST_NAFTA_HARDSHIPS.html