Daily Report
Oaxaca: more violence in capital, APPO seeks Papal mediation
Approximately 30 armed men in civilian clothes, some with their faces covered, attacked the central camp of the Popular People's Assembly of Oaxaca (APPO) in the state capital at dawn on Nov. 21. The camp, outside the cathedral of Santo Domingo de Guzman, just three blocks from the Federal Preventative Police (PFP) police camp in the city's central square, was set on fire and the residents forced to flee. (La Jornada, Nov. 21) An APPO statement accused the attackers of being "sicarios [assassins] financed by the state government, dressed as civilians and with high-powered weapons." (APRO, Nov. 21)
Chiapas: more attacks threatened against Zapatista communities
The PRI-affiliated Organization for the Defense of Indigenous and Campesino Rights (OPDDIC), issued a letter demanding the EZLN dismantle its Good Government Juntas in the Lacandon Selva, with a barely-veiled threat of new confrontations if this fails to happen. In a letter addressed to Subcommander Marcos, President Vicente Fox and Gov. Pablo Salazar, the OPDDIC, founded by former PRI state deputy Pedro Chulin Jimenez, accused the Zapatista Juntas of provoking "grave social destabilization" in the municipalities of Altamirano, Ocosingo, Chilon, Sitala and Tumbala. These "offiical" municipalities overlap with the Zapatista "autonomous municipalities" overseen by the Good Government Juntas based in Morelia (Altamirano) and La Garrucha (Ocosingo). The letters accused the Juntas of "protecting delinquent groups."
Chiapas: Lacandones flee jungle conflict zone
From Milenio, Nov. 20, via Chiapas95 (our translation):
For the first time in more than three centuries, some 300 Lacandones have fled their communities for fear of new confrontations with residents of Viejo Velasco, who sympathize with the Zapatista National Liberation Army, according to the director of Na Bolom Cultural Association, Jorge Vecellio.
Mexico: "dirty war" report finds "crimes against humanity"
From El Universal, Nov. 20:
The government on Saturday released a long-awaited report that for the first time officially blames "the highest command levels" of three former presidencies for the massacres, tortures and slayings of hundreds of leftists from the 1960s to the early 1980s.
More street fighting in Oaxaca
From AP, Nov. 20:
OAXACA — Masked protesters armed with sticks, rocks and homemade gasoline bombs clashed with police and raided a downtown hotel Monday during a march by leftists seeking the governor's resignation.
Iraq: jihadis can't take a joke
From AP, Nov. 21:
BAGHDAD -- Relatives and colleagues mourned the fatal shooting of popular actor Walid Hassan, remembering him Tuesday as giving hard-pressed Iraqis comic relief by poking fun at everything from politicians to long lines at gas stations.
Lebanon: Pierre Gemayal assassinated
From the pan-Arab Al-Bawaba, Nov. 22:
Lebanon started three days of mourning on Wednesday following the assassination of an anti-Syrian Christian cabinet minister that his allies blamed on Damascus. Industry Minister Pierre Gemayel was assassinated as he drove in a Christian suburb of Beirut on Tuesday.
Next for Somalia: khat wars?
Since seizing power in Mogadishu, Somalia's capital, in June, the Islamic Courts Union has banned khat leaf, the mild stimulant which has been traditionally chewed by Somalis for centuries. Imports of khat from Kenya, a main supplier, are being intercepted and burned, and flights from Kenya have actually been halted. This has resulted in a shortage which has sparked angry protests by local khat merchants in Mogadishu, who have lost their income. In one protest on Nov. 16, Islamist fighters shot into the crowd, killing one person. (BBC, Nov. 16)

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