Eviction Order Carried Out in Mexico
Land: Mostly American residents have little time to pack as 400 police move in to seize disputed beach property for former owners.
By KEN ELLINGWOOD, Times Staff Writer
ENSENADA--Mexican federal authorities moved forcefully Monday to begin
evicting U.S. retirees from homes built on beach
property at the center of a long-running land battle.
Backed up by more than 400 police officers, officials of a federal land
agency went door to door to carry out an eviction order
handed down last week by Mexico's Supreme Court to settle the ownership
dispute.
Residents, many from Southern California, were in some cases given only
a few minutes to abandon their homes, on a scenic
finger of land about 18 miles south of this port city.
"It's like somebody dying and you have to say goodbye," said Guadalupe
Limon, tears trailing under her sunglasses.
Limon and her husband, Juan, had to decide swiftly to pack up their belongings
and leave the two-story house across the street
from the beach where they lived part-time for 12 years. As movers loaded
appliances and furniture into a van, the Limons planned to
return to their other home in La Verne.
"I'd have felt better for a tsunami to blow it away than for another human
to take it," Guadalupe Limon said.
The eviction had been feared for a week, after the court's ultimatum to
land agency officials to give the disputed land to former
owners. Officials at the agency, the Agrarian Reform Ministry, said Monday
that they planned to transfer ownership of nearly 200
acres settled largely by American retirees.
Efforts to block the officials' arrival Monday morning were short-lived.
Police arrived dramatically, about 8 a.m., in a caravan that
included busloads of unarmed police, ambulances, a tow truck and equipment
to move cars and a sand pile that had been put in the
way.
A phalanx of 60 officers had to push through a blockade of Americans and
local members of a peasant cooperative who locked
arms in unity against the evictions. The peasants group, the Ejido Coronel
Esteban Cantu, insisted that it owns the property and has
leased it to the Americans.
"Don't move!" shouted Warren Ovadia of San Diego, whose mother owns one
of the homes, as the police prepared to move in.
But it took officers only seconds to force their way through the crowd.
There was minor scuffling between the officers and
members of the peasants group, but no injuries. No Americans were arrested.
The evictions created a strange tableau: clusters of Mexican police in
gray jumpsuits moving in military style through the tidy
cul-de-sacs while residents emptied homes as if fleeing a disaster. The
soundtrack was provided by the surf's steady wash.
As the land officials, joined by representatives of the new property owners,
moved through the stylish beach houses, a few
residents refused to leave.
Maurice and Rose Erickson, a couple from British Columbia, Canada, who
moved into their home in January, said they planned
to hold out. "We'll see what they're going to do," said Rose Erickson.
But three hours later, there was no sign of the couple and a document conveying
the home to new owners sealed the front door.
Agrarian Reform Ministry officials said that although the Americans were
required to move out immediately, they would be
allowed to store their belongings inside for 30 days--time to attempt to
negotiate new lease terms with the new owners. Some of the
U.S. citizens already were talking with the owners about how much they
would pay to retain use of lots for which they had paid up
to $90,000 for a 30-year term.
Marlowe Harms, 78, of Riverside said he and his wife were allowed by the
new owners to remain for six months in hopes of
working out a new contract. The question was how much that would cost.
Many of the residents complained that the evictions left
them little room to negotiate.
Others faulted the Mexican and U.S. governments for not coming to their
aid to preserve their use of land they long believed they
occupied legally. Representatives from the U.S. Embassy in Mexico City
and the U.S. Consulate in Tijuana were on hand to monitor
observance of the American residents' rights as evictions took place.
"This is the worst thing I've ever seen. This idea that the police can
walk down the street and take your house is absolutely
unforgivable," said Leigh Zaremba, vice president of the homeowners association.
The group has appealed the evictions under terms
of the North American Free Trade Agreement protecting foreign investors.
The disputed land was ceded as a communal land grant to the peasants collective
in 1973 by presidential decree. The group then
leased the land, allowing development of a 96-room hotel--the centerpiece
of the Baja Beach and Tennis Club--and more than 200
homes in the club and along the peninsula nearby.
But the Supreme Court ruled that the land, in fact, belonged to several
private companies that had gone to court to seize it.
Representatives of one of those firms, Purua Punta Estero SA, on Monday
took control of the hotel and began evicting
homeowners.
"They've had more than five years to deal with us," Gerardo Limon, an investor
in the company, said as officials served eviction
notices. "This simply is in accordance with the law."
Copyright 2000 Los Angeles Times