Chiapas Rebels Offer to Give Fox--and Peace--a Chance
Mexico: Zapatistas agree to resume talks if demands are met. In Oaxaca visit, new president signs bill to boost rights.
By CHRIS KRAUL and MARY BETH SHERIDAN, Times Staff Writers
LA REALIDAD, Mexico--In a possible breakthrough in one of Mexico's most
intractable
political problems, the leader of the 1994 Zapatista rebellion agreed Saturday
to resume peace
talks stalled for four years--but only if the government of new President
Vicente Fox makes
concessions first.
Subcommander Marcos, leader of the mostly Maya rebels here in Chiapas,
demanded that
the government evacuate seven army bases in the southern state, pass an
Indian rights bill and
release all Zapatista "political prisoners" as a sign of goodwill.
"Mr. Fox, if you choose the way of respectful, serious and sincere dialogue,
show your
willingness with deeds," Marcos, wearing his trademark black ski mask,
said during his first
public appearance in more than a year.
"You can be sure you will have a positive response from the Zapatistas.
And this way you can resume the
dialogue and soon begin to build a true peace," the rebel leader told about
250 journalists summoned to a jungle
clearing north of the Guatemalan border for a late-afternoon news conference.
Marcos' appearance was the most dramatic sign so far of the changes that
could occur after
Fox's Friday inauguration, which ended the reign of the world's longest-ruling
party, the Institutional
Revolutionary Party.
Fox did not immediately respond to Marcos' proposals. But Mexican radio
reports said the
president and his top aides planned to analyze them.
The Zapatistas launched an uprising in January 1994 that claimed at least
145 lives during two
weeks of fighting. Their subsequent peace talks with the government broke
down in September
1996 and have been followed by a tense cease-fire.
Fox has made a peace accord with the rebels a top priority. At his inauguration
ceremony, he
said that his first proposal to Congress this week will be an Indian rights
bill favored by the
Zapatistas. Also Friday, he ordered the Mexican army to withdraw from roadblocks
and
encampments near rebel strongholds in Chiapas.
On Saturday, Fox traveled to Oaxaca, a southeastern state populated mostly
by indigenous
people, for the first leg of a "victory lap" around Mexico to celebrate
his inauguration.
Accompanied by, among others, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, he reiterated
his appeal to
the Zapatistas to resume talks and vowed to "write a new history" embracing
the country's Indians,
who have suffered from severe poverty and discrimination.
The Zapatista uprising, coming after Mexico had bound itself to the U.S.
economy with the North America Free Trade Agreement,
shocked politicians, investors and citizens alike. Initially, the rebels'
fight for indigenous rights and democracy won them sympathy
around the globe. However, the rebels have become increasingly marginalized
in Mexico as the situation has dragged on while the
country has made significant democratic advances--including Fox's election
July 2.
In possible recognition of his isolation, Marcos indicated Saturday that
he was ready to leave his hide-out in the Lacandon jungle and
make an unprecedented trip to the Mexican capital. He said he was prepared
to bring the top commanders of the Zapatista army to the
national Congress early in the new year to plead their case.
But Marcos, who espouses left-wing views, showed that he was still unsure
of what to make of Fox, who is from the conservative
National Action Party, or PAN.
The rebel leader, dressed in the Zapatista uniform of olive fatigue pants
and a brown shirt and sitting on a makeshift stage in this
jungle village, began his 80-minute speech by assailing the course of Mexican
politics in recent decades. He expressed suspicion that
Fox's victory could represent a triumph for the "ultra-right" and big business.
However, he added that the pullback of troops Friday and Fox's appointment
of a respected democracy activist, Luis H. Alvarez, to
deal with the Chiapas conflict were positive signs.
"We hope this will be a new dawn," he said, echoing a similar phrase used
repeatedly by Fox.
Still, the rebel leader insisted on concrete concessions from the government
before he will sit down to talk peace.
The government, he said, should withdraw troops from seven bases in Chiapas,
including one at Guadalupe Tepeyac, a onetime rebel
stronghold that Marcos had to flee under army pressure. Since the Zapatista
uprising, the government has positioned tens of thousands
of troops in the southern state. The encampments named by Marcos are all
in highland and jungle towns where the Zapatistas have
support bases.
Marcos also insisted that the government release all Zapatista Please see
MEXICO, A11
MEXICO: President Signs Pact Boosting Rights
Continued from A10
"political prisoners" in Chiapas and around the country. It was not clear
how many prisoners he was referring to; the government
generally denies imprisoning citizens for political views.
Finally, Marcos insisted on the adoption of the San Andres accords. Those
accords, on extending cultural and judicial rights to Indian
communities, represented the only important agreement reached by the rebels
and the government before the breakdown of talks in
1996.
The Zapatistas walked out of the negotiations when then-President Ernesto
Zedillo objected to the language of an implementing bill
for the San Andres accords submitted by a congressional committee.
While Fox did not immediately respond to Marcos' proposals, radio reports
said that his spokeswoman, Martha Sahagun, had reacted
positively to them. Marcos' olive branch came as the new president was
continuing with a volley of proposals intended to show his
concern for the country's indigenous minority.
In Oaxaca, for example, Fox signed an agreement with Mary Robinson, a senior
United Nations official, to expand human rights
protections, especially for the indigenous.
"It's very important that the president signed this on his first working
day," Robinson said in an interview. The accord had been
hammered out over two years with the Zedillo administration, she said.
However, it was Fox who invited her to Mexico for his
inauguration and the signing.
"We have gotten very strong signals this government wants to do more,"
said Robinson, the U.N. high commissioner for human
rights and former president of Ireland.
At his rally Saturday, Fox also emphasized that he has upgraded the government's
office for indigenous affairs and moved it to Los
Pinos, the Mexican White House. The official in charge of the office, Xochitl
Galvez, greeted the crowd in her native tongue, Nha Nhu.
Fox's pledge to end discrimination against the indigenous drew hearty cheers
from the crowd of about 5,000, many wearing
embroidered Indian clothing, that packed a plaza near a colonial church
under a bright sun in Oaxaca city, the state capital.
Before the rally, the mayor of the capital, along with a group of indigenous
leaders, presented Fox with the "ruler's staff"--a wooden
stick traditionally presented to the leader of Indian communities.
"We have hope. We want change," Alberto Rodriguez said, shortly before
he presented the staff to Fox. "Total change."
Kraul reported from La Realidad and Sheridan from Oaxaca. Times staff writer
James F. Smith in Mexico City contributed to this
report.