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WSWS : News
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& Central America
Zedillo government spurns victims of Mexico storm and mud
slides
By Gerardo Nebbia
16 October 1999
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The devastation caused by the recent storms in Mexico reveals
the state of social neglect in that country. Many hundreds have
died, tens of thousands have been left homeless and hungry, and
public health emergencies have been declared in many areas due
to the danger of cholera and infectious diseases. Homes and fields
have been turned into pools of mud by the worst downpour in 40
years. On October 15 another storm was developing in the Gulf
of Mexico and was expected to continue the destruction. At least
253,000 have been left homeless in 9 out of the 31 Mexican states.
Yet what best characterizes the response of the Mexican government
is indifference. In contrast to the popular outpouring of donations,
the government of President Ernesto Zedillo has responded in a
perfunctory manner. Everywhere there are reports of supplies hoarded
for distribution to political supporters of the government, while
aid is denied to areas believed to be in opposition to the ruling
party. Offers of foreign assistance were turned down, with no
reason given.
In Villahermosa, the capital of Tabasco state, a demonstration
by hundreds of people against the complacency of the authorities
was savagely repressed. Many of the protesters were beaten by
the police and jailed on October 11. The protesters dispute government
claims that only 342 people have died in Tabasco. They point out
that community and private organizations report at least 600 dead.
Villahermosa is a city of half a million inhabitants. It has been
under water for more than a week.
President Zedillo himself gave a measure of the contempt that
the government has for the victims of the storm when confronted
last week by a group of them in Veracruz. After one man interrupted
him with demands for aid, Zedillo threatened: "Are you going
to let me speak? I am the president of the Republic. If you say
anything else I will make you pay." Moments later, Zedillo's
bodyguards pushed through the crowd to escort the man out. The
object of Zedillo's anger was Leonardo de Luna Martínez,
a retired teacher who demanded help and disputed Zedillo's assertion
that the government had the situation under control.
In Michun, Puebla, 70 people died, including 20 children and
their teacher who were killed when a hill collapsed on their school
on October 6. A surviving teacher described how screams could
be heard throughout the night coming from the ground. When the
army finally arrived the next day, they dug up 17 of the small
bodies. On the same night, the village of Zacatlan was swallowed
whole by mud slides. At least 30 died.
In Hidalgo state alone, destroyed bridges and roads have left
100,000 people stranded. In Veracruz and Oaxaca 450,000 are without
electricity.
The government reports that over 12,000 soldiers are being
assigned to dig out the bodies and to help the survivors. This
is a woefully inadequate figure when one considers the vast geographical
area that must be covered. Furthermore there is a scarcity of
equipment to dig people out. There are reports of volunteers using
improvised tools, buckets, and even their bare hands. Many of
the bodies being dug out are in an state of decomposition, creating
the possibility of the spread of tetanus and other infectious
diseases.
In Teziula, Puebla, where a landslide killed at least 140 inhabitants,
federal legislator Giudela Tapia accused Francisco Labastida of
using government aid to further his political campaign. Labastida
is running for the presidential nomination of the ruling Institutional
Revolutionary Party (PRI). According to the charges, donations
from across Mexico are being waylaid to be repackaged with the
logo of Labastida and the PRI. Aid is being channeled to the more
populated areas, while thousands of rural Indians go hungry.
The PRI's main conservative rival, the National Action Party
(PAN), is being accused of similar tactics. "The politicians
have lost all sense of morality," declared a human rights
activist in Mexico City.
In Puebla, a peasant woman reported that survivors are without
food and shelter living on a "sea of mud." The president
of the Human Rights Commission of Puebla said that he personally
witnessed how members of the Indian community of Mixum were being
denied help because they are considered supporters of another
opposition party, the PRD (Party of the Democratic Revolution).
He also reported that mayors of several Puebla cities have been
hoarding the aid earmarked for flood victims to release it on
the eve of upcoming primaries.
Similarly, in Veracruz state it was reported that the National
Indian Institute is hoarding 50 tons of corn in one of its regional
centers, allegedly to hand out during the November 7 PRI primaries.
Oaxaca state, one of the poorest in Mexico, was already reeling
from the impact of the September 30 earthquake, which left many
people homeless. While it can be argued that earthquakes cannot
be predicted, the storm that is devastating the Mexican states
of Jalisco, Michoacán, Puebla, Tabasco, Oaxaca, Hidalgo
and Veracruz had been announced to everyone.
Satellites had been observing this tropical depression since
it began. The amount of rain it could potentially dump, between
250 and 350 mm per day (10 to 14 inches), had been accurately
predicted. Following an initial erratic trajectory, the storm
settled over the states of Veracruz, Hidalgo, Tabasco and Oaxaca.
There it rained over the Sierras, flooding the rivers that head
to the Gulf of Mexico.
An official of the Mexican Federal Civil Protection Service,
Jose Luis Alcudia, indicated in an interview to the Mexican magazine
Proceso that the governors and other state officials knew
about the approaching storm. "Everybody knew," said
Alcudia. We all knew which areas would be affected early
onthe state agencies, radio operators, Red Cross, the Federal
Police and the Department of Defense."
Alcudia made the dubious claim that in spite of all the warnings,
poor people refused to leave their homes, only to be buried by
mud slides. He blamed the resistance of the residents of Teziutlán,
Puebla, to evacuation orders on their "lack of culture."
On Thursday, October 7, 50 people were buried alive and killed
by mud slides in that city.
Yet Alcudia has also admitted that poverty forces people to
live in unsafe and isolated canyons and that states and cities
do not enforce building codes and provide safe sites for housing.
Such is the level of distrust of government authorities that many
of those that were warned of the impending storm greeted the government
officials with arms in hand.
This is not the first time that poor people in the region have
experienced floods that washed away their homes and killed canyon
dwellers. Several winters ago, the city of Tijuana was also victim
to killer floods. Last year Hurricane Mitch laid waste to much
of Honduras and Nicaragua. The impact of the latest storm falls
on a much more populated and broader area of Mexico and Central
America, where hundreds are also confirmed dead. Making matters
worse is the destruction of 240 thousand hectares (600,000 acres)
of cropland and 10,000 animals in Puebla, Veracruz and Hidalgo,
according to preliminary estimates.
The reality is that in each of these environmental disasters
it is the poor who are most affected. About 61 million of Mexico's
98 million inhabitants live in poverty. In terms of housing, 2.5
million homes don't have drinking water; 4.5 million homes are
in areas that lack adequate drainage. Almost a million families
have no electricity. Close to a million and a half households
lack adequate kitchens and 3.3 million homes do not have indoor
plumbing.
In a society in which the richest 30 percent of the population
receives 64 percent of total income, and the poorest 30 percent
only 9 percent, hundreds of thousands have been marginalized and
imperiled, forced to live in dangerous conditions and without
the necessary means to survive such storms.
See Also:
President
Zedillo slashes budget
[24 September 1999]
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