Category Archives: International

Oaxaca: a No Sweat background briefing

NoSweat.org: Oaxaca: a No Sweat background briefing

“Oaxaca Vive, La Lucha Sigue!”
Oaxaca Lives, The Struggle Continues!
November 2006
By Paul Hampton

The savage repression of the movement in Oaxaca state in Mexico at the end of October has cost at least 17 lives and hundreds injured. But the struggle goes on. This briefing outlines the events leading up to the repression and looks at the tremendous history struggle by teachers in Oaxaca and across Mexico.
Timeline: Oaxaca 2006

Survivors of mass abduction recount torture, targeting of Sunnis

Lexington Herald-Leader: Survivors of mass abduction recount torture, targeting of Sunnis

Shiite militiamen who snatched scores of Iraqis from a government office divided their captives by sect and freed only those who could prove they weren’t Sunnis, survivors of the incident said in interviews Sunday.

At least 64 men abducted last week in the brash daylight attack on a scholarship office in Baghdad remained unaccounted for Sunday, and the Sunni minister of higher education repeated a threat to resign unless the Shiite-led government shows progress in tracking down his missing employees.

UK: Universities focal points for radical Islamists, says minister

The Guardian: Universities focal points for radical Islamists, says minister

Universities have become focal points of Islamist extremism and are potential recruiting grounds for radicals of all kinds, the higher education minister, Bill Rammell, said as he published new campus guidance on tackling Muslim extremism.

Gunmen in Iraq Abduct Scores of Men in Daytime Raid on a Higher-Education Agency’s Offices

Globe and Mail: Academics seized in daring Baghdad raid
Gunmen barged into a research institute in central Baghdad yesterday and seized dozens of staff and visitors in what appears to be one of the biggest mass abductions since the start of the U.S. occupation of Iraq.

The Chronicle: Gunmen in Iraq Abduct Scores of Men in Daytime Raid on a Higher-Education Agency’s Offices

In a grim escalation of violence against Iraqi higher education, gunmen raided a government education agency in Baghdad on Tuesday and abducted scores of male employees and visitors. Some of the men were released within hours of the attack. The rest were freed in police raids shortly before midnight, a security adviser in the Iraqi president’s office told the BBC.

Greece: Sellout of teachers’ strike paves way for massive government attacks

Indymedia.org: Greece: Sellout of teachers’ strike paves way for massive government attacks

On October 30, the unions ordered back to work high school and primary school teachers who started their six-week-long strike on September 18, disrupting the start of the new academic year. As part of winding down the campaign, two one-day strikes were held on November 3 and 9, and general meetings are to be held to “assess” the next stage.

Barbados teachers wildcat strike against pay docking

libcom.org: Barbados teachers wildcat strike against pay docking

Teachers at the Alexandra School in Barbados launched a wildcat strike after bosses attempted to deduct a day’s pay for their attendance at a union event.
Amanda Lynch-Foster reported on nationnews.com that teachers, saying they were “fed up” with the behaviour of principal Jeffrey Broomes, took industrial action yesterday morning.

The ‘Battle of Oaxaca’ Intensifies

Green Left Weekly: The ‘Battle of Oaxaca’ Intensifies
A five-kilometer-long “mega-march” of hundreds of thousands of protesters took place in the state of Oaxaca on Nov. 5. It demanded the resignation of the hated state governor, Ulises Ruíz Ortíz (known as URO). Only a few days earlier, on Nov. 2, there was a battle to keep control of Benito Juárez University from federal troops that occupied the city of Oaxaca, the state’s capital, on Oct. 29. These were just the latest events in a popular revolt in the southern Mexican state aimed at ousting the governor after he used savage repression to curb a teachers’ strike in July.

Cyprus: Teachers union set to call off strike

Cyprus Mail: Teachers union set to call off strike

SECONDARY school teachers’ union OELMEK look set to call off the strike planned for later this month after last-minute intervention by the House Education Committee to smooth out the situation between teachers and the Education Ministry yesterday proved a success.

Oaxaca: Ruiz and APPO both reconsider strategy

World War 4 Report: Oaxaca: Ruiz and APPO both reconsider strategy
The Oaxaca People’s Assembly (APPO) resumed their organizational congress on Saturday in Oaxaca City, while the state’s embattled governor announced the beginning of a massive Cabinet overhaul in hopes of preserving his job.

The APPO congress suffered fits and starts during Friday’s session as participants awaited the arrival of delegates and guest observers from across the country.

Saudis Again Head to U.S. Campuses

Washington Post: Saudis Again Head to U.S. Campuses

A record number of nearly 11,000 Saudis are pursuing higher education in the United States, reversing a years-long decline in students coming from the oil-rich kingdom, particularly after the 2001 terrorist attacks.

Canada: Universities move to hide work from U.S. eyes

Globe and Mail: Universities move to hide work from U.S. eyes

Patriot Act prompts institutions to switch to Canadian server for online research

CAROLINE ALPHONSO
EDUCATION REPORTER
Concerned about the U.S. government’s prying eyes, a number of Canadian universities are changing the way their professors and students conduct online research.

Botswana Trade Unions plan strike

SomaliNet News: Botswana Trade Unions plan strike

Botswana’s Trade Unions have threatened a strike this week unless Botswana’s government restores Japhta Radibe, as head of the Botswana Teachers Union (BTU).

Botswana’s government has been given up to Tuesday to reinstate Radibe. This is after he lost his position as head teacher, a move many owe to his continued criticism against Botswana’s Education sector.

The Oaxaca teachers union suspended an assembly on Saturday and criticized allied protesters for “generating a tense environment.”

El Universal: The Oaxaca teachers union suspended an assembly on Saturday and criticized allied protesters for “generating a tense environment.”

The Oaxaca teachers union suspended an assembly on Saturday and criticized allied protesters for “generating a tense environment.”

A visibly upset Enrique Rueda Pacheco, the teachers union leader, told reporters the assembly was canceled after Radio Universidad, controlled by the Oaxaca People´s Assembly (APPO), began summoning people to the assembly and using inflammatory language.

Nigeria: Unity School: No pay for striking teachers –Govt

Daily Sun: Unity School: No pay for striking teachers –Govt

Minister of Education, Dr. Obiageli Ezekwesili may have ordered a clampdown on principals of Unity Schools, where the teachers are on strike as some of the school heads were arrested at the weekend for allowing the industrial action.

Que Pasa en Oaxaca?

The Nation‘s Michael McCaughan on the state of seige in Oaxaca:

Que Pasa en Oaxaca?

A virtual state of siege prevails in Oaxaca City where thousands of military police have occupied the central square and surrounding streets, clearing barricades and detaining dozens of opposition activists. The city’s emergency services are idle while banks and schools remain closed and the city center, usually bustling with tourists, has the air of a ghost town. The hub of activity has shifted to the Santo Domingo church where thousands of activists gather daily to swap news, make plans and denounce police brutality.

Sixth Megamarch Organized by APPO Underway in Oaxaca

NarcoNews: Sixth Megamarch Organized by APPO Underway in Oaxaca

During the night helicopters brought military troops into the city. According to “La Doctora,” impeccably
calm and intelligent as ever on Radio Universidad, the people must remain non-violent. She mentioned Mahatma Ghandi and to avoid the provocations the military and PRI will attempt. The people must remain organized and dignified, she said.

China: From steel mills to diploma mills

Asia Times: China: From steel mills to diploma mills

Life is no walk in the park for many students in China, especially if they flunk entrance exams for the most prestigious universities. For those without connections, a degree from a top university is their only hope in a job market saturated with degree-holders.

Government statisticians reckon this year will see 4.1 million university graduates chasing 1.4 million jobs requiring a tertiary education. That is why scientists and engineers can be had for a song in China, one factor foreign investors find attractive.

Protesters turn Mexican university into stronghold in Oaxaca rebellion

USA Today: Protesters turn Mexican university into stronghold in Oaxaca rebellion

Masked men patrol the gates, armed with bats and gasoline bombs, and barbed wire and booby traps defile the campus lawns. Since protesters took over the state university in Mexico’s besieged Oaxaca City, there have been no classes, only talk of revolution.

The university of 30,000 students has become a stronghold for leftists trying to oust the Oaxaca state governor in a five-month-old conflict that has left at least nine people dead.

France: Thousands of students ‘join sex trade to fund degrees’

The Independent: Thousands of students ‘join sex trade to fund degrees’

Increasing numbers of young women in France are turning to sex work to help pay the bills while they are at university, according to one of the country’s leading students’ unions.

According to the SUD-Etudiant union, 40,000 students in France – or nearly 2 per cent – fund their studies through the sex trade.

Mexico: Oaxaca Tense and Only Relative Calm after Police Crackdown

IPS News: Tense and Only Relative Calm after Police Crackdow

The Mexican government justified on Monday the violent storming by federal police of social protests in the capital of the southern state of Oaxaca, saying it had restored peace and order. But the evidence tells a different story.

“The situation has got worse. We have been subjected to violent and unacceptable attacks (on Sunday) which left three dead, more than 50 under arrest, several ‘disappeared’ and some cases of torture,” Florentino López, spokesman for the Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca (APPO), told IPS.

Flavio Sosa, another of the organisation’s leaders, said negotiations with the government would be shut down as long as federal police forces — who he described as “criminals and rapists” — remained in Oaxaca.
But President Vicente Fox, whose six-year term is due to finish in December, sees things from a different angle. “Today, social harmony has returned to Oaxaca,” he said on Monday.

In Oaxaca “we were able to combine dialogue and the search for agreements with establishing order and respect for the law. Dialogue was essential to restoring peace and calm,” he said.

On Sunday afternoon, thousands of police in armoured trucks entered Oaxaca, the state capital. By dint of shoving, truncheon blows, tear gas and water cannon, the police evicted the APPO encampments and barricades that the protesters set up five months ago in the city streets and parks.

The demonstrators, most of whom offered no resistance and instead bunkered down in the buildings of the public Benito Juárez Autonomous University, held protest marches Monday through the city of Oaxaca, demanding withdrawal of the police and the immediate resignation of Governor Ulises Ruiz.

The conflict in Oaxaca began on May 22 when teachers went on strike for higher wages. They were joined by 350 social organisations that came together in APPO in June, after Ruiz called in the police to break up the teachers’ protest.

The conflict escalated to the present level amid failed negotiations between the federal government and APPO.

The protesters’ main demand is the removal of Ruiz, who they accuse of corruption and authoritarianism. But the governor, who belongs to the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), refuses to go, in spite of pressure by his own party and by the Fox administration to do so.

This Monday, legislators of the governing National Action Party (PAN) and the leftwing Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD) approved, without PRI support, an agreement in which they publicly called on Ruiz to resign.

Meanwhile, Emilio Gamboa, leader of the PRI in the Chamber of Deputies, asked the governor to “examine his conscience” as to whether he should remain in office.

According to APPO activist López, the protesters who are missing may have been taken to military installations and are probably being subjected to torture. He also said three people were killed.

Government spokespersons have denied these reports. They say 23 people were arrested and that there was one death, a youth hit by a firecracker that he had set off himself.

The governmental but independent National Human Rights Commission, which sent 18 observers to Oaxaca, said that it had recorded one death as a result of the police crackdown, the same young man mentioned by the government. According to the Commission, he died after he was hit by a tear gas canister.

Dialogue with APPO remains open, and the unionised teachers of Oaxaca, who are at the heart of the uprising, will suspend their strike and return to their classrooms Monday, said Rubén Aguilar, Fox’s spokesman.

But APPO says it will not resume talks with the government unless the police pull out of Oaxaca, and classes have not started.

Police stood guard on the main streets and parks of Oaxaca Monday, but elsewhere APPO supporters were rebuilding their barricades. Meanwhile, commercial and tourist activity in the city remained low-key.

The minister for Security, Eduardo Medina, explained that the decision to use force in Oaxaca was based on the premise that violence and disorder could not be allowed to continue in the state.

“Use of force is not the way to solve a social and political conflict. But it had to be done, and now there will be dialogue and negotiation through institutional channels,” he said.

Medina denied APPO’s suggestion that sending the police into Oaxaca was a move in support of the controversial state governor. He insisted that the purpose of the action was solely to restore order.

The police were sent in the day after violent clashes between APPO members and men in civilian dress who have been identified as local police officers and municipal officials linked to the PRI. The violence was the worst since the social and political conflict began in May.

The shootout involved the use of firearms by both sides, as confirmed by film images and photographs. Four people were killed, including Bradley Will, an independent U.S. journalist who was working for the alternative on-line news agency Indymedia. His death drew a protest from the U.S. embassy in Mexico.

Human rights groups have reported that APPO members have been repeatedly attacked by paramilitary groups and hired killers. Most of the 15 people who have died so far in the Oaxaca conflict belonged to APPO.

According to Sergio Aguayo, an academic and political scientist at El Colegio de México, the police raid in Oaxaca did not solve the conflict and, in fact, might make things worse.

Historian Lorenzo Meyer felt much the same way. He believed that the decision to use force in Oaxaca may have been a response to pressure from the U.S. embassy after the death of reporter Bradley Will. (END/2006)