New jobs bring hope in Mexico's poorest state
Chiapas Governor Salazar's biggest challenge is wooing skeptical indigenous farmers and guerrillas.
By Gretchen Peters | Special to The Christian Science Monitor
TUXTLA GUTIERREZ, MEXICO - In place of black ski masks and army fatigues,
the newest "revolutionaries" in Chiapas don suit and tie. In
lieu of guns and machetes, they carry Palm Pilots, cellphones, and laptop
computers.
The man leading the charge is neither gun-wielding indigenous guerrilla
nor disaffected farmer. He is Gov. Pablo Salazar Mendiguchía,
whose rainbow coalition of parties is giving many in this backward state
new hope.
In Chiapas, where more than half the population lives in grinding poverty,
and where some rebel Indian communities refuse any contact with
government authorities, Salazar admits that comprehensive change may be
a long time coming. But after one year in office, and a broad
plan to improve everything from healthcare and roads to government transparency
and the economy, a handful of communities are already
reaping benefits of Salazar's vision.
Francisco Estrada Santiago lives in Cintalapa, a poor community west of
here, where most people used to grow corn for a living or scrounge
day-labor jobs in plantations, earning $16 a month. But now, he and 300
others have jobs in the new Millennium Youth Factory, a model
program aimed at capturing some of the benefits of free trade. They now
make $200 a month sewing jeans for export to Wal-Mart.
"It's a miracle, this factory," Mr. Estrada raves, as he checks stitched
denims on the quality-control line. "Before, I was lucky to find day
jobs twice a week. Now, I am working here with two cousins, and it has
completely changed our family lifestyle."
A recent survey found that per capita spending in Cintalapa had shot up
more than 15 percent since the factory opened its doors earlier this
year, boosting income for small restaurants and shops that dot the town's
main street.
Other deals will create 7,000 factory jobs statewide, the largest one-year
increase in more than a decade. "One of our most important
strategies is to generate ways to employ people in these small communities,"
says Antonio D'Amiano Gregonis, economic development
director.
Key to creating jobs is improving roads and infrastructure, says Salazar,
enabling export goods to flow, and thus bringing in private
investment. The state has procured millions of dollars in federal funding
to build or improve key roadways, expand airports, and grow the
Pacific coast shipping anchorage at Puerto Madero.
A temperate, humid climate that spans vast tracts of land is ideal for
growing coffee, nuts, and fruits, though post-revolution land reform
divided much of the land into family-owned plots too small to be profitable.
So Salazar's development team wants to build joint factories in
growing regions so that farms producing coffee, mangos, and cashews can
process, package, and share the cost of shipping the goods.
Food giants like Sarah Lee have signed up as buyers.
Other pilot programs are putting computers in rural schools, teaching children
in their native Indian tongues, and offering scholarships for the
next generation of lawyers, environmentalists, and doctors.
It remains to be seen how many disaffected rural communities will opt to
engage with the Salazar government. Many, like the Zapatistas,
are fighting for autonomy. Earlier governments also promised them change,
but few indigenous communities trust a government that has
done little to alleviate poverty and inflicted often-violent persecution.
The antiglobalization Zapatistas, for example, sealed themselves off from
the outside world after rejecting a peace process initiated by
President Vicente Fox last year. They have typically spurned efforts at
economic development, calling Mexico's export industry a symbol of
modern slavery to rich nations. Salazar says he wants to find "a new way
to relate to these communities."
But some Indians say they still haven't heard enough of a change in the political rhetoric.
"I think Salazar's heart is in the right place," says one Zapatista, who
refused to give her name. "But we still have a sense that they are
treating us like kids who can't decide for ourselves what kind of life
we will have."
Even if the "autonomous" communities agree to work with Salazar, it also
remains to be seen if private investors will risk working with them.
"It is one thing to get plaudits on his peace line, and another thing to
get the money," says Federico Estévez, an analyst at the
Autonomous Technological Institute of Mexico. "Investors don't put money
where their goodwill is."
If Salazar can pull off even a small measure of economic success, observers
say, it will seem like a revolution has occurred in backward
Chiapas.