Mumia Abu-Jamal has been on Pennsylvania’s death row since 1982 on false charges of shooting a Philadelphia cop, being railroaded for his revolutionary journalism and for his role as a youth organizer of the Black Panther Party. He writes often on the struggles of the oppressed.
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This isn’t a regional observation, but a global one.
That tendency is seen in the prosecution and unjust sentencing of men and women from Atenco, Mexico.
The state repression stems from popular resistance to police attacks on flower vendors in May 2006 in Texcoco, Mexico. People supported the flower vendors and not the police, who are among the most corrupt in the world.
But, as ever, repression breeds resistance, for the struggle to support the flower vendors led to pitched battles between the people and the state police. For two days (May 3 and May 4, 2006) the two sides battled back and forth, baton and rock, Molotov cocktail and projectile, hand to hand, like the ebb and flow of the sea on the shore. When the state seized several townspeople, people in turn held some of their agents, demanding freedom for their captive comrades. The police then arrested more than 200 people, beating, sexually abusing, raping and indeed, torturing them. Two young boys were killed.
These struggles took place in the villages of Texcoco and in San Salvador Atenco. Atenco has a long history of resistance to the central government, dating from before Mexico’s Revolution of 1910.
So, among the over 200 men and women arrested, the state keyed on organizers and leaders, and brought out heavy ammunition to destroy them, and through them, the growing popular resistance to government repression and seizures of peasant and indigenous lands.
In 2001, the poor of Atenco organized the Peoples’ Front for Defense of the Land (Frente de Pueblos en Defensa de la Tierra) and stopped former Mexican President Vicente Fox from grabbing their farmlands. When they prevailed, a movement was born. It was this group which spearheaded the defense of the flower vendors of nearby Texcoco, and it was this group which was targeted by the state.
A year after the May 2006 street battles, three prominent leaders of the Peoples’ Front, Ignacio del Valle, Felipe Alverez and Hector Galindo, were sentenced to 67-1/2 years in maximum security. Last August, “Nacho” del Valle was hit with an additional 45 years for the Atenco Resistance.
He was not alone in this.
Others—Oscar Hernandez, Alejandro Pilon, Julio Espinosa, Pedro Reyes, Juan Carlos Estrada, Jorge Ordonez, Narciso Arellano, Ines Rodolfo Cuellar and Eduardo Morales—were each sentenced to almost 32 years in prison for their roles in the Atenco Resistance. One of the flower vendors, Patricia Romero, was given 4 years (she, her father and son are now out on bail).
Members of the Peoples’ Front and other Atenco activists are determined to fight for their people, and their freedom. They urge you to support their struggle. You may sign a petition seeking freedom for the Atenco political prisoners at: [email protected]
FREE THE ATENCO 13!