Category Archives: International

Showdown looms as Mexican riot police move in on city occupied by protesters

The Guardian: Showdown looms as Mexican riot police move in on city occupied by protesters

Thousands of federal riot police backed by armoured trucks and helicopters pushed into the Mexican city of Oaxaca yesterday as a protest that began over teachers’ pay spiralled into a major confrontation.

Police wearing body armour and carrying riot shields and submachine guns were accompanied by water cannon and helicopters as they moved from the outskirts of the city towards the central plaza that has been occupied by a leftwing movement for months.

The Teacher’s Strike in Oaxaca: A primer

Pine Magazine: The Teacher’s Strike in Oaxaca: A primer

A little while back we ran a story about the teacher’s strike in Oaxaca. The entire story can be found here, though we’ve excerpted it below to fully focus on Mexico’s Oaxaca, which has been under police siege after a massive teachers’ protest. The protest has been going on for about five months, with a recent violent peak that left one person dead.

Here are some news stories written by people on the scene: Reuters, Forbes and the AP/USA Today. We are trying to hunt down more independently written articles for you.

Teachers’ union proposal for strike rejected

ANA: Teachers’ union proposal for strike rejected

Teachers in public middle schools and high schools are also set to return to classrooms on Monday, as a proposal by their union’s leadership, OLME, for a 24-hour strike on Nov. 3 and 9 failed to win a two-thirds majority of local representatives that attended an urgently called general assembly on Friday.

From Oaxaca to the Zócalo: Uprisings and Repression in Mexico

gibler2.jpg
Upside Down World: From Oaxaca to the Zócalo: Uprisings and Repression in Mexico

Jose Santiago sits in front of the radio station’s guarded door with a box of bread rolls in his lap. To his left, soda crates filled with Molotov cocktails line the wall. To his right two women with a club stretched between them block the door. A 62 year-old elementary school principal in Oaxaca City, Santiago was supposed to retire this year, but when state police brutally repressed a teachers’ strike on June 14, sparking an unprecedented civil uprising from all sectors of society, he thought, “I’d rather jump in.”

Draft Iran Resolution Would Restrict Students

The New York Times: Draft Iran Resolution Would Restrict Students

The United States and three European allies have given Russia and China a draft text for a Security Council resolution against Iran’s nuclear program. The proposal includes the extraordinary step of preventing Iranian students from studying nuclear physics at foreign universities and colleges.

Wales: Prepare for all-out strike over pay dispute, teaching union warns

icWales.co.uk: Prepare for all-out strike over pay dispute, teaching union warns

TEACHERS’ union NASUWT is warning of all-out strike action at a Wales secondary school if talks today fail to resolve a long-running dispute over pay.

Oaxacan Teachers Reject Return to School: SNTE Still on Strike!

Sant Cruz IMC: Oaxacan Teachers Reject Return to School: SNTE Still on Strike!

Questions about the process and manner in which Union leadership initiated a controversial referendum to return to work led to a rejection of the ‘consulta’ and the continuation of the five-months-and-running teachers strike.

Prensa Latina: Mexico: Oaxaca School Year Unknown

Mexico, Oct 23 (Prensa Latina) Three days of consultations, a general assembly plus clashes with the teacher s union surround the teachers strike in Oaxaca, Mexico.

Detroit Free Press: MEXICO CITY: Teachers refuse to return

MEXICO CITY: Teachers refuse to return
The teachers union in the southern Mexico state of Oaxaca rejected a plan Sunday to return to classes today and end a five-month strike. Delegates representing 70,000 workers decided to throw out a vote held last week showing that most teachers wished to return. Teachers will vote again this week, officials said. The conflict began as a teachers’ strike over pay and working conditions in May. It has since broadened into a coalition of more than a dozen groups. Some objected that union leader Enrique Rueda had failed to make the resignation of the state’s governor, Ulises Ruiz, a condition for returning to class. Ruiz is accused of rigging the 2004 election to win office and sending armed thugs against his opponents.

University in Egypt embroiled in battle of the veil

Middle East Times: University in Egypt embroiled in battle of the veil

Egyptian students whose faces are completely hidden behind the veil have been banished from the residence halls at Helwan University under threat of expulsion in what could be called the battle of the veil.

Qatar to fund Islamic university in Europe

The Peninsula: Qatar to fund Islamic university in Europe

Qatar has pledged that it will take part in financing the first Islamic university to be established in Europe by next month.

The university, named the ‘Ibn Sina Institute for Human Science’, will be opened in the French city of Lilie, located in the northern part of the country.

Veil controversy rocks Egypt university

Aljazeera.net: Veil controversy rocks Egypt university

Egyptian students who wear the veil could face expulsion from a leading university if they refuse to uncover their faces.

Helwan University has already banished students from residence halls and has threatened to expel from campus those who turn up with their faces covered, university officials said on Friday

Israel: University year to begin as planned after budget cuts rescinded

Haaretz: University year to begin as planned after budget cuts rescinded

The academic year for higher education institutions starts Sunday, after the threat of a strike at the country’s universities was allayed by a NIS 140 million infusion by the Finance Ministry.

Human-Rights Group Criticizes Iran, Saying It Bars Some Politically Active Students From Universities

The Iranian government barred at least 17 students from pursuing graduate studies this year because of their political activism, and required more than 54 students to sign statements that they would observe political and ideological regulations, according to a paper released on Wednesday by Human Rights Watch.

UK: Lecturers on strike

Further Education News: Lecturers on strike

Failure to negotiate pay parity has led Northern Ireland’s lecturers into action

College lecturers in Northern Ireland yesterday supported their union’s calls for strike action as teaching ‘virtually ceased’ for the fourth time in recent weeks.

Greece: Gov’t again appeals to teachers

Athens News Agency: Gov’t again appeals to teachers

The government on Monday repeated its call to teachers to end their strike and return to classrooms. Government spokesman Theodoros Roussopoulos stressed that, while everyone respected the important work that they did, state finances made it impossible to meet their demands.

Mexico: Community Radio Central To Struggle In Oaxaca

Znet: Community Radio Central To Struggle In Oaxaca

Under multicolored tarps, thousands of teachers are asleep on the streets of Oaxaca City, Mexico. Their bodies lie within inches of one another in a sea of blankets, the sleeping figures separated from the pavement with only pieces of cardboard. The sounds of guard shift changes occur every two hours throughout the night. Small hand-held radios hum “Friends, compañeros, its exactly 17 past 1 in the morning on this Friday the 21st of September 2006. Another day of struggle, another day of advancement. At a winners pace.” The radio has become the life blood of this teachers strike turned popular movement in Oaxaca. Not only giving voice to the traditionally voiceless, the radio also serves as an organizing and coordination tool. It is the main communication between the tens of thousands of teachers who began in one encampment on the main square and who are now blockading over 20 government buildings, have exiled the state government from Oaxaca and are creating a democratic alternative.

Nigeria: Teachers begin strike in Delta

Nigerian Tribune: Teachers begin strike in Delta

TEACHERS in Delta State public primary and secondary schools have been directed to stay away from schools as from today.

Papua New Guinea: Teachers win case

The National: Teachers win case

THE National Court last Friday upheld the legality of the strike by teachers in July this year.
Deputy Chief Justice Salamo Injia upheld the applications by legal counsel representing the teachers’ union Ben Lomai that there was no cause of action to warrant the case to proceed and that there was irregularity to the mode of proceedings.

UK: Universities urged to spy on Muslims

The Guardian: Universities urged to spy on Muslims

Lecturers and university staff across Britain are to be asked to spy on “Asian-looking” and Muslim students they suspect of involvement in Islamic extremism and supporting terrorist violence, the Guardian has learned.

University Leaders See Rewards and Risks in Internationalization, Survey Finds

The Chronicle: University Leaders See Rewards and Risks in Internationalization, Survey Finds

The vast majority of leaders of colleges and universities around the world believe that while the internationalization of higher education is of utmost importance, there are also serious risks inherent in the process, according to a recent survey.

Oaxaca update: Protest Reaches Mexican Capital

El Universal: Protest Reaches Mexican Capital

Protest Reaches Mexican Capital
By John Gilber/Special to The Herald Mexico

El Universal – October 10, 2006

http://www.mexiconews.com.mx/20880.html

Juan Pérez, a thin, 25 year-old teacher from Jocotepec,
Oaxaca, has been walking for the past 19 days. He wears
rough leather sandals, jeans, a hand-woven straw hat,
and a shirt with “APPO: a dream in construction”
painted in orange letters across the front.

“No revolution is going to come from behind a desk,” he
says as he swings his small backpack over his shoulders
and sets out from Nezahualc’yotl on the final 8 miles
of his journey.

“For the government, the voices of the people don’t
count,” he says, “that is why we have to take to the
streets, to do something with the impotence we feel.”

Pérez and several thousand of his colleagues from the
Oaxaca Peoples Popular Assembly (APPO) have walked
from Oaxaca City over 250 miles and through four states
to bring their demand that Gov. Ulises Ruiz Ortiz be
ousted.

The march, which left Oaxaca City on Sept. 21 and
arrived in Mexico City on Monday, comes on the heels of
a four-month struggle to force the Ruiz Ortiz out in
response to a failed attempt on June 14 to violently
break up a teachers strike in Oaxaca´s central plaza.

“This is an example of people’s having reached the
limit of patience with decades of neglect,” says César
Mateos, one of the march’s organizers.

“The movement in Oaxaca seeks deep structural changes,
and the first step in these changes is the exit of
Ulises,” he says. “But we want to achieve these changes
through a peaceful movement, which is why we have done
this march. This is the true face of the APPO.”

The march began with over 4,000 people, dipped to
around 1,000 on the last few days, but then swelled to
at least 10,000 as it entered Mexico City.

The APPO protesters walked an average of 8 hours a day,
through both rainstorms and blistering heat, over
mountains and through valleys, enduring chilly nights
of mosquito bites and scorpion stings.

They were often met with support along the way,
including much needed nourishment from sympathetic food
and juice vendors along the highway.

“The support kept me motivated even though my feet
hurt,” said Betty, a 40 year-old preschool teacher from
San Mateo on the Oaxaca coast. “I cried twice, not from
the pain, but because there was so much support from
people.”

The marchers, carrying handmade signs, puppets mocking
Vicente Fox, and cardboard coffins for Ulises Ruiz,
walked down busy avenues leading to the Z’calo,
blocking traffic and enduring the full force of the
late-summer sun. Hundreds of people from nearby
neighborhoods and street-side markets lined the streets
to hand out water and sandwiches along the way.

They plan to set up a protest camp in front of the
Senate and have vowed to stay in Mexico City until
Ulises Ruiz is forced from office.

==========

Oaxaca, Mexico Overcoming Crisis

Prensa Latina – October 10, 2006

http://www.plenglish.com/article.asp?ID=D54D366B-AC36-4652-A306-015DEE52F221)&language=EN

Mexico

Following eight hours of talks, the teachers’ union,
the Assembly of the People of Oaxaca (APPO) and the
Mexican Secretariat of Government finally agreed to
solve the ongoing conflict in that Mexican state via
legal procedures.

They decided to put public security in the hands of the
municipal and state police, led by a federal level
undersecretary.

Until Friday, APPO will hold consultation sessions on
handing over the capital of Oaxaca while teachers
promised to put the question of returning to classes to
the rank and file.

Removal of Governor Ulises Ruiz, the main demand of the
social movement, will be processed by the Senate, also
in charge of ruling on elimination of powers.

Meanwhile, a caravan of Oaxaca teachers and grassroots
activists arrived Monday evening in the Federal
District to stage a sit-in in front of the Senate to
demand the removal of Ruiz, which they consider the
only possible out of the conflict.

==========