Before daybreak on 6 February this year, a few
thousand elite Federal Police (PFP) under the express orders of President
Ernesto Zedillo stormed the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM).
"Operation UNAM" was followed by the arrest of about 1,000 students and
several professors. This action ended the historic ten-month long siege of the
university by UNAM students and staff.
This struggle is a highpoint in the growing
radicalisation of the student community across the world in recent years. It has
sent ripples across the Latin American student community in particular and
threatens the ruling comprador bureaucratic-feudal classes of Mexico represented
by the reactionary Zedillo with long term revolutionary consequences.
The UNAM Uprising
On 20 April 1999, 2,70,000 students of UNAM, the
largest university in Latin America, went on a strike protesting against the
introduction of fees for the new semester. Instead of the token 2 cents that
they were paying, they now had to cough up $ 220 per semester. Education, which
was free in UNAM since 1911, had come under fire by the IMF structural
adjustment regime.
On 20 April, thousands of UNAM students attended
general body meetings to vote on behalf of the strike. The thunderous support
for the strike was demonstrated on 23 April when more than 1,00,000 students and
other supporters of their struggle gathered at the Plaza in Mexico City.
On 25 April students, with the participation of
their parents, occupied an unrelenting UNAM’s administrative building.
On 29 April, representatives of 11 other national
universities across Mexico, where fees stood at an exorbitant $ 2,000 to $ 3,000
per semester, expressed their solidarity for the UNAM uprising and commemorated
that day as a "national day for the
defence of free education".
In a little over a week, the UNAM student uprising
had become the central political event in Mexico. It continued to remain so for
the next 10 months and beyond. It threatens to outlast the Zedillo government’s
forced entry into UNAM to suppress the struggle on 6 February this year.
The UNAM uprising was echoed in towns like
Tepatepec where students resorted to similar take-overs.
Organising the Uprising
The rebellious mood of the students could be
glimpsed in September 1995 itself, coming as it did, in the wake of the Mexican
financial collapse of 1994. Hundreds of UNAM students occupied the
administrative building demanding for a more accountable admissions process.
However, in 1999, students formed a General Strike
Committee (CGH) comprising of 120 members, to lead the struggle. This committee
also included UNAM workers and a few professors and some parents. After the
take-over of the administrative office and thus the management of the university
into their hands, Defence Committees were organised with students and university
workers in order to foil attempts by the police from entering the campus and
breaking the strike.
The Student Left Block (BUI) affiliated to the
Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD)—a breakaway from Zedillo’s ruling
Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) and a revisionist political coagulation
of the parliamentary left—had a major role in co-ordinating the uprising.
However, in the course of the struggle, the BUI and CGH had several times
crashed through the revisionist fence the PRD had erected.
During the 10-month period when UNAM was in the
hands of students, traditional course work was discarded. Instead, political
discussions were organised on a daily basis ranging from the crisis of Mexican
society to the armed struggles raging across the world.
New developments in the struggle were debated. Banners and leaflets were
released each day. Press conferences were held "almost daily". Frequent
marches were held in which thousands of students participated. On 2 October, for
instance, 60,000 students participated in a 15 km long march across Mexico City.
Collective kitchens were run by mobilising food from trade unions, peasants,
parents and other well wishers. In the short span of 10 months the mass of
students had acquired more than what they had learned in all their lives: they
were radically politicised.
Student
Demands
The students had raised six demands:
1. No tuition fees.
2. An end to authoritarian rule of the
university management, and student-teacher-employee-administration joint
participation in the management of UNAM.
3. Amnesty for student strikers.
4. Rescheduling of the lost semester.
5. Reform of admissions procedures.
6. Ending UNAM’s relationship with the national
student testing service.
The government refused to concede any one of these
demands.
After elite police stormed the campus on 6
February, a seventh demand was included to this charter: Release of all the
arrested companeros.
Among the earliest of statements of the CGH, the
students proclaimed : "We the students of
UNAM are in a struggle for a free education, so that everyone who has the desire
can be able to enter, not just those who can pay."
The Mexican government replied that it had no money
and therefore had to cut state funding of education. To this the CGH said:
"If it’s true there is no money, why are
more than 700 billion pesos [$ 65 billion] being used to ‘rescue’ the private
banks?…. These funds, which are being paid by the people would support 80 UNAMs.
Why is the army getting more than 50% of the country’s Gross Domestic Product?
Why is education getting only 4 per cent, when it is the people who pay, and who
are being charged again and again through these new fees?"
The CGH statement further said that the decision to
impose fees came as a result of pressure from the IMF and World Bank which
"expect from Mexico a cheap source of
labour, not educated people with the capacity to reason".
Through these statements, the CGH openly exposed
the fact that the repressive comprador bureaucratic character of the Mexican
ruling classes was in the service of imperialism. They had the money to save the
big private bank owners, by shoring them up with $65 billion (called the
Fobaproa Plan) but not for the students. The CGH also exposed the fact that
Mexico, which faced no external military threat, was spending about half the
national budget on defence in order to implement its repressive schemes on the
popular struggles—armed and unarmed—that have shaken Mexico in recent years.
The CGH released a manifesto, called The Road to
Victory, in late April 1999. The manifesto clearly illustrated that the decision
to impose a tuition fee was nothing but the first step in "the move to
privatise UNAM" eventually landing it in the hands of Mexico’s big business.
The manifesto further said:
"The charges against us are laughable and do
nothing more than convince us to keep fighting against injustice and for free
education…. Gentlemen of the government: the struggles of our people are a
consequence of the despicable political, social and economic conditions in which
the country lives."
On 10 February, only four days after the Zedillo
regime established through armed action, its rule over the sprawling UNAM
campus, the CGH component that evaded arrest issued a statement which said:
"The government and the Chancellor are
mistaken if they think that with the detention of almost 1,000 members of the
CGH—political prisoners—and unleashing a witch hunt, they will defeat this
movement…. The people have openly embraced the demand for free public education
and freedom for our unjustly jailed companeros…. Those who clamoured for the use
of repression against the movement…are the same ones who strip the people of
their rights. They are the ones who have robbed us with the protection of the
State [Fobaproa]. They are the ones who rip babies out of the wombs of their
mothers in Acteal. Those who now accuse us of terrorism, robbery, injury,
sabotage, criminal association, property damage and riot, are the real
criminals, the murderers of the people. They are the ones who should be in
prison."
President Zedillo might have scored a success in
retaking the campus. "Operation UNAM" and initial attempts by "Cobra"—a
government sponsored paramilitary gang to break the uprising—have only further
angered the Mexican student masses even more.
Repression through "Operation UNAM" has been
the most important factor in radicalising the student masses of Mexico, teaching
the more advanced among them the most important lesson in struggle—to beware of
the fascist state and to seek the avenue of protracted people’s war to smash it.
The manner in which the campus was conceded after a
historic 10-month take-over comes as a surprise. At first glance it appears that
the conspiratorial PRD and some elements of its student wing might have had a
role in it. Yet, it is clear after the forced take-over, that the government
will meet none of the student demands. This is precisely what pushes the Mexican
student to become explosive material.
On 6 March 2000, one month after the loss of UNAM
without a fight, and the continued presence of their companeros in jail, the
simmering anger of the UNAM student community broke out. Reuters reported on the
same day:
"200 masked students supported by parents entered
the rector’s office smashing windows and overturning metal detectors."
Describing the loss of the administration building,
a UNAM spokeswoman shrieked: "They have
taken the building back".
The battle rages assuming more intense proportions.
"Operation UNAM" refuse to be the last words in this struggle.
Remembering the Tlatelolco Massacre
The Mexican student uprising revives memories of
the student upsurge of the late 1960s that rocked the world. The similarity
between the student movement of Mexico today and the Mexican groundswell of 1968
are not drawn merely by radical political analysts.
The Mexican student movement of today has breathed
life into the 500 students that were massacred in Tlatelolco Plaza in Mexico
City on 2 October 1968.
The largest march so far to commemorate the
Tlatelolco massacre under the then PRI President Diaz Ordaz was undertaken on 2
October 1999 when "tens of thousands of
UNAM students overflowed this huge plaza at Tlatelolco in Mexico City carrying
red carnations and chanting political slogans."
On 2 October 1968, 5,000 students were joined by
workers, their wives and children demanding democratic reforms including
autonomy for the country’s universities, the freeing of political prisoners and
social justice. By
6-00 pm, as day gave way to night, 2,000 army troops sealed off all exits of the
plaza and fired on demonstrators butchering them indiscriminately.
A survivor of this massacre said last year on 3
October: "We will never forget that
night. Through a corner...we saw how the soldiers threatened students with their
weapons and arrested everybody they came upon. A little later many cargo trucks
arrived, for the hundreds of bodies that were all over the ground. It was a
night of engines, lights and sirens everywhere, the longest and saddest in my
life."
500 were killed including the hundreds arrested
without a trace of them till now.
In October 1997, 29 years after the massacre, the
case was opened. Stray documents relating to the blood bath have been leaked
despite the army’s refusal to release them. However, it is already evident that
the massacre was pressured by the Central Intelligence Agency as part of US
imperialism’s dirty war against Communism world wide.
When 60,000 students—most of whom were not even
born at the time of the massacre—marched to the Tlatelolco Plaza in Mexico City
last year, they demanded the Zedillo government to bring up all the secret files
for public view. They were itching for justice. Apart from this demonstration,
spurred by the militant contagion that had spread across Mexico from its
palpitating heart in UNAM, students in several different towns of the country
demonstrated on 2 October 1999 placing an identical list of demands before the
fascist backers of the Tlatelolco massacre.
The students bore no illusions about the force they
were up against. They clearly saw through the democratic veneer of the murderous
PRI Zedillo regime.
Allying with the Workers and
Peasants
The second significant feature of the Mexican
student movement is the alliance and integration with the workers and peasantry
and other democratic sections of Mexican society. The manifesto released by CGH
demanded for a cancellation of the government "proposal to privatise the
electric industry". These words of solidarity were translated into deeds
when 30,000 students joined electrical workers in September 1999 in a massive
show of strength against the Zedillo government’s policies of selling away
national industry and services to the multinationals.
The composition of the UNAM student community, in
contrast to the other universities of Mexico, comprises a large component of
students from working class and peasant backgrounds owing to the fact that
education in this university has been free. Furthermore, a fair number of
students of UNAM are also workers themselves who labour a few hours in the day
and attend college by night. Hence, behind the demand for free education, has
been the lingering idea that education will become impossible for students of
working class and peasant backgrounds. Hence a class angle has persisted in the
student uprising all along.
Many organisations extended their support to the
student struggle. On 10 February 2000, in a protest action against "Operation
UNAM", attended by 15,000 people, more than 80 organisations from across the
country extended their solidarity to the students. Prominent among them were:
the National Liberation Front of Zapatista (FZLN) and the Revolutionary Popular
Army (EPR)—both of which have been waging armed struggle in the south-west and
south of the country basing themselves among the oppressed peasantry against the
Mexican government; the Barzon, an organisation of farmers who have been ruined
by the economic crisis as a result of the process of globalisation; the national
alliance of teachers; and human rights and trade union organisations.
The UNAM student uprising has therefore led not
only to the radicalisation of the students at large but has also stood out as a
point of reference for demarcating the revolutionaries and progressives from the
reactionaries. It has served as a rallying point as much as a dividing line
between the people and their enemies.
A Deepening Economic and Political
Crisis
The UNAM uprising gains significance because it has
occurred at a time of unprecedented and grave crisis of semi-feudal
semi-colonial Mexico. To resolve its problems the comprador ruling classes of
the country went in for massive loans from the IMF in the 1980s consenting to
its Structural Adjustment Programme. The joining of NAFTA by Mexico has further
ruined its agriculture and industry and has pushed the workers and peasants into
fresh bouts of struggle against the Zedillo regime.
Added to this unprecedented economic crisis, the
Mexican political structure has begun to experience the worst instability in
several decades. The Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) which commemorated
70 years of its formation on 9 April 1999 was in fact reminiscenting over a
bygone era of unchallenged plunder. It remains among the rabid few political
parties in the world to have ruled a country without a break for seven full
decades.
Established 10 years after the assassination of
Emiliano Zapata, who led the Mexican revolution against feudalism, the PRI
betrayed the revolution and emerged as the instrument of the Mexican comprador
bourgeoisie. It led a corporativist programme after the Second World War and
contributed to the consolidation of comprador-bureaucratic rule over a
semi-feudal country. Since the 1980s, and particularly under the Presidentship
of Salinas, the Mexican economy has been further integrated into the imperialist
economy, specifically that of USA, and has led to the emergence of a new group
of comprador billionaires who have monopolised the Mexican economy. In 1987 and
1993 the PRI split over the nomination of the successor Presidential candidate,
leading to the formation of parties such as the PRD and PCD on each occasion.
Today, within the comprador PRI, presided over by
Zedillo, there are at least half a dozen factions and there are at least two
main streams of response as to how the economic crisis facing Mexico ought to be
solved. While one trend wants closer integration with the USA, the other wants a
nominal level of nationalisation to stay, albeit, subservient to imperialist
domination. The strife between these groupings and political forces has grown
intense. The political scene has witnessed assassinations and counter
assassinations of leading politicians. Zedillo has to quit office and a new
President has to be elected this year. 2000 comes as a year of intense political
infighting for the Mexican bourgeoisie.
The Mexican student movement, coming at a time of
the worsening of the economic crisis, has caught the Mexican ruling classes in
the midst of deep trouble. An important factor that contributes to the political
crisis of the ruling system is the emergence, since mid-1990s, of four
organisations—the EZLN, EPR, ERIP and FALMPG—which have been waging guerrilla
warfare against the Mexican government.
The students know that even if they miraculously
manage to get free education, since the economy is in shambles, they will surely
not be able to get jobs. The Mexican student community knows that it is up
against a solid wall. It has little options before it. Death or Revolution—it
will soon have to decide.
Student Resurgence
The last significant factor of the Mexican student
struggle is that it is taking place in a global context where students have
begun to play an exemplary role in fighting imperialism and domestic reaction.
Starting with the Chinese student uprising when one
million students laid siege to the Tienanmen Square for more than a month in
1989, to the uprising against Burmese military rule, when students took Rangoon
by storm, to the pitched street battles of the South Korean students, to the
blockade of the Indonesian parliament in Jakarta, and the massive student
upsurge in Tehran in 1999—students have reasserted their militancy and desire
for real democracy.
The Mexican student uprising which ushered in the
new millennium belongs to this select list of student radicalism against
imperialism and for democracy that is set to sweep the world.
More particularly, the student uprising at the
biggest Latin American University, UNAM, comes in the midst of nationwide
student outbreaks in Chile, Bolivia and Venezuela, and major struggles by
students in Argentina and Peru.
For all these reasons then, the Mexican student
uprising has the potential of drawing from and inspiring a new round of student
radicalism across the globe.
In the late 1960s there was student radicalism no
doubt. But then there wasn’t the economic crisis that confronted imperialism in
the 1990s and threatens its existence in the first decade of the fresh century
of the new millennium. The Mexican students have given serious thought to the
struggles of the 1960s. But they should also give thought to the danger of
revisionism in Mexico and simultaneously reflect on the people’s wars led by
Maoists in Latin America itself and across the globe which beckon them with the
proletarian invitation: Dare to Fight ! Dare to Win !!
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