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FNS: Border Social Forum.
October 23, 2006
FNS Feature
The Ciudad Juarez Border Social Forum: Cross-Border
Movements Growing
I n response to a call that "another world is possible
without borders" about 1000 people gathered in the Mexican
border city of Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua, from October 12-
15, 2006. Hailing from Mexico, the United States and other
nations, representatives from immigrant rights,
environmental justice, campesino, ex-bracero, Chicano,
Native American, African American, Asian and Pacific
Islander, left, and human rights organizations attended
the first-ever Border Social Forum (BSF). A delegation
from Cuba's National Assembly also observed the events.
BSF organizer Ruben Solis, coordinator of the San Antonio-
based Center for Justice, said the event built on years of
cross-border movements to "bring together all that's
happened before in a new phase of development."
.
Kat Rodriguez, coordinator of the Tucson-based Human Rights
Coalition, captured the concerns of many of the delegates
at the meeting when she detailed migrant deaths in the
dangerous border crossing zone between Arizona and Sonora.
Rodriguez said her group has documented the deaths of 698
people in the Arizona-Sonora border region during the last
three years alone. According to Rodriguez, 317 victims
remain unidentified, with 17 remains so deteriorated that
it is impossible "to know if they were male or female."
The human rights activist said stepped-up controls are
confining previously frequent border crossers to "the
golden cage" of the United States and encouraging more men
to send for their families. "Another dynamic we've seen in
the last three years is an increase in the deaths of women
and children," Rodriguez said, adding that the death toll
of border crossers has risen so greatly that last year Pima
County was forced to rent a refrigerator truck to deposit
bodies because the local medical examiner ran out of
storage room. Upwards of 4,000 migrants have died along the
length of the entire US-Mexico border while trying to enter
the United States without papers during the last 13 years,
according to estimates from human rights organizations.
Contending that the failure of market-driven economic
policies in Latin America to raise living standards and
provide decent-paying jobs is spurring an increasingly
fatal exodus from the South to the North, Rodriguez
proposed the reexamination of the economic status quo. "I
think the first thing we need is to demand a renegotiation
of the free trade agreements, NAFTA and CAFTA" Rodriguez
said. "Nobody asks why people are coming here."
During the Border Social Forum, hundreds of demonstrators
took to the streets of Ciudad Juarez to protest the planned
construction of new walls on the US side of the border, a
project which activists contend will force more desperate
migrants into hostile weather zones like the so-
called "corridor of death" east of the Yuma Valley. Before
one day, a rainbow suddenly bloomed from the stormy border
skies over the marchers.
Blasting the project as the "Wall of Death," the protestors
wound their way through the border city's downtown femicide
zone where dozens of young women have vanished. Filing by
the pink cross monument set up to honor femicide victims
and distributing leaflets in memory of 22-year-old
schoolteacher Edith Aranda Longoria, who disappeared in May
2005, the marchers partially closed the Santa Fe Bridge
between Ciudad Juarez and El Paso, Texas, before halting
at the US borderline to hear short speeches delivered in
support of immigrant workers and against prevailing
economic policies.
Justice for veterans of the 1942-64 Bracero Program of
Mexican guestworkers who worked in US fields and on
railways was one prominent theme addressed at the BSF.
Former bracero Filemon Ruiz Martinez, who labored in the
sugar beet fields of Michigan in the late 1950s, recalled
that he was paid "very little money" for lots of hard work.
Early this year the Mexican Congress approved pay-outs to
former braceros who had money withheld from their
paychecks by the Mexican government decades ago for a
supposed savings account. While some ex-braceros received
payments of about $3,700 dollars this year, many others
like Ruiz complain that they are still waiting for their
money. "We understand that they gave 125 ex-braceros in
Chihuahua their money, but they have given us absolutely
nothing," Ruiz said.
A Border Reality Tour
Helping kick-off the BSF was a "reality tour" of Ciudad
Juarez neighborhoods and industrial sites. Former
maquiladora plant worker and tour guide Veronica Leyva of
the Mexico Solidarity Network led two bus loads of visitors
through the dusty and flood-prone streets of the Felipe
Angeles, Anapra and Lomas de Poleo colonias. Situated in
the high desert where company buses transport workers back
and forth to the factories far below in the city, Lomas de
Poleo is the focus of a land ownership dispute between long-
time residents and members of the prominent Zaragoza
family. The once-marginal shantytown is now a potentially
lucrative parcel of real estate abutting the zone where the
state governments of Chihuahua and New Mexico plan the new
binational-border city of San Jeronimo-Santa Teresa.
Monitored by two guard towers that rise above the desert
shrub, as well as the vigilance of two municipal policemen
parked in patrol cars nearby, dozens of visitors listened
to two residents accuse authorities of permitting a
campaign of violence and intimidation against them to
proceed unimpeded. Residents charge that the land conflict
is behind house burnings and three deaths in Lomas de Poleo
during the last two years, including the deaths of two
young children in a mysterious fire. Displaying gunshot
wounds, one young man said his friend Luis Alberto Guerrero
was killed and another companion wounded in a confrontation
last year with alleged Zaragoza gunmen. "The people who
were responsible for this act are roaming free," he
charged. "The law doesn't do anything."
In the 1990s, Lomas de Poleo gained international notoriety
as one of the clandestine cemeteries where the multiple
bodies of young female murder victims were discovered. Of
the eight crosses erected in honor of the murder victims,
only two were visible by the time of the 2006 BSF. One of
the remaining crosses was defaced by gang-related
graffiti.
Rambling out of the rough hills and back into the glitzy
flatlands, the tour buses followed the long commute that
maquiladora workers from Lomas de Poleo endure each day as
they clock in another shift on the global assembly line. In
contrast to the rustic living conditions they witnessed
in Ciudad Juarez's colonias, the BSF delegates also saw
the newly redone Paseo del Triunfo de la Republica
boulevard that whisks traffic pass the US fast food
franchises, strip malls and trendy bars and cafes which
define the other Ciudad Juarez. Halting in front of the
Antonio J. Bermudez Industrial Park, tour guide Leyva
compared the bustling side of her city with the forgotten
one, and explained the wages and working conditions she
said many maquiladora employees are forced to accept.
"It's important for you to see the channeling of economic
resources by the government to the big industries, big
capital. This channeling of resources has not permitted the
development of the popular colonias," Leyva affirmed. "I
don't know if you've noticed that we've passed through big
avenues that are well maintained and preserved," Leyva
continued. "It's not a coincidence that these avenues have
been solely constructed for the purpose of linking together
the 18 industrial parks of the city so commerce flows
freely to the international bridges."
Yvonne Stratford and Gerda Graham closely paid attention to
the tour scenes. The two women belong to Low Income
Families Fighting Together, a non-governmental organization
struggling to preserve low-income housing in Miami's
African American community of Liberty City. Appalled at the
conditions in Ciudad Juarez's colonias, Stratford and
Graham stressed the need for people to organize. "Don't
think (anybody) is going to give it to you," Stratford
remarked. "You got to go out there and fight
for it."
Convened just weeks after summer flooding provoked
widespread destruction in Ciudad Juarez, the BSF featured
one session in which residents of the Luis Olague colonia
and other poor neighborhoods reiterated their complaints
about uncertain relocation plans; the theft of flood relief
aid; inadequate official support for reconstruction, and
the spending of public money on monuments instead of flood
control. Some explained how they now suffer anxiety attacks
every time the skies thunder and the rain starts dropping.
Although the 2006 floods in Ciudad Juarez were especially
bad, this year wasn't the first time colonia residents have
experienced disaster from the rains. Elizabeth Flores, the
director of Pastoral Obrera, a Catholic Church affiliated
worker advocacy organization that assists flood victims,
framed the disaster issue as ultimately one of human
rights. "(Flooding damage) wasn't unpredictable, "Flores
contended. "It was a lack of respect for the human rights
of all residents of the city not to invest..."
Flood victims reported an additional problem that emerged
after the deluge: the spread of health-threatening molds
inside homes and stagnant water pools on the streets
outside that provide prime mosquito-breeding grounds. "We
cleaned and disinfected," shrugged Luis Olague resident
Maria de Jesus Avila. "But what are we going to do?"
Action Plans
After hearing from grassroots groups, the BSF participants
issued a statement that called for sweeping changes in
economic, immigration, justice, environmental, gender, and
security policies on both sides of the border. Comparing
the fate of Louisiana flood victims in 2005 to those in
Ciudad Juarez a year later, the statement denounced what it
called "the classism and racism" of the authorities' "late,
timid and limited" response to the flooding disasters in
the United States and Mexico.
Denouncing border walls from the US-Mexico frontier to
Palestine-Israel, Border Social Forum attendees expressed
solidarity with the Oaxaca strikers, Pasta de Conchos mine
disaster victims' families ex-braceros, and 5 Cuban
prisoners currently held in the United States. They also
called for an international group of observers to be
present at Ciudad Juarez's embattled Lomas de Poleo colonia
in order to "guarantee protection and security" for
residents.
A central demand of organizers was to remove agriculture
from world free trade agreements and that basic grains in
Mexico be exempted from the tariff tear-down scheduled in
the North American Free Trade Agreement for 2008. Picking
up on last spring's immigrant worker strike and boycott in
the United States, support for a similar action planned
for May 1, 2007 was declared.
Organizers of the BSF came from many different groups in
Mexico and the United States, including the Southwest
Workers Union, Border Agricultural Workers Union, Pastoral
Obrera, Cetlac, Southwest Organizing Project, Southwest
Network for Environmental and Economic Justice, Democratic
Farmers Front of Chihuahua, Grassroots Global Justice, Farm
Labor Organizing Committee, and CISO, among many others.
Modeled after the World Social Forum initiated in Porte
Alegre Brazil in 2001, the BSF is a prelude to the first
US Social Forum scheduled for 2007 in Atlanta, Georgia.
Tens of thousands of people have attended the world and
regional social forums. Veterans of the Ciudad Juarez
gathering plan to take their movement to upcoming regional
and international social forums, as well as to other events
like the 2007 Border Governor's Conference in Nogales,
Sonora, where an "alternative border people's summit" will
be held.
Organizer Ruben Solis said that participating social
organizations will likewise attend big NGO meetings slated
for Puerto Rico, Venezuela and Bolivia in the coming
months. One important achievement of the Ciudad Juarez
meeting, Solis said, was a call to organize a Mexican
farmer's social forum in Chihuahua, Mexico. At the same
time, plans are in the works to create an alternative
border media network. In terms of developing solutions,
Solis credited the Ciudad Juarez event for putting a wide
array of social movements on the path of "convergence."
instead of "competition." "(The BSF) carried out what we
intended in terms of creating convergence between the
movements," he said. "It has a multiplying effect, it's
very positive."
Kent Paterson, FNS Editor
(Photos: Brax - Valley Publishing Company)
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Editor, Upper Valley Beacon
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