Daily Report

Anti-war referenda pass in heartland, New England

From the Capital Times of Madison, WI, Nov. 8:

Organizers of a movement to bring U.S. troops home from Iraq are lauding success at the ballot box from Wisconsin to Massachusetts.

Haiti: two UN soldiers killed

A patrol of Jordanian soldiers in the United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH) came under fire on the evening of Nov. 10 as they were returning to their camp near the Port-au-Prince international airport. Two soldiers were killed: 1st Lt. Ahmad Mohammed Hassan Ba'irat and Cpl. Rami Wasif Taha Al Mohammed. The incident took place close to the center of Port-au-Prince's Sonapi (Societe Nationale de Parcs Industriels) industrial park, near the impoverished Cite Soleil neighborhood. This was the worst violence against the MINUSTAH force since Dec. 24, 2005, when a Jordanian soldier was killed with a shot to the head, also near Cite Soleil. (Associated Press, Nov. 11; Haiti Press Network, Nov. 11)

Mexico City approves civil unions

Six years after it was first introduced, a bill allowing same sex civil unions in Mexico's Federal District (DF, Mexico City) was approved by the Federal District Legislative Assembly (ALDF) by a vote of 43 to 17, with five abstentions. Thirty-three deputies from the center-left Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD) voted for the measure, and one abstained, while 16 of the 17 deputies from the center-right National Action Party (PAN) voted against it; most deputies from the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) and smaller parties abstained or backed the law. Human rights and lesbian-gay rights groups had repeatedly criticized the PRD, which has ruled the DF since 1997, for failing to get the law passed.

Oaxaca: APPO pledges renewed resistance

Classes resumed at Oaxaca's state university Nov. 13, even as 1,700 delegates of the leading coalition of protest groups emerged from a "constitutive congress" vowing to step up their actions. The Popular People's Assembly of Oaxaca (APPO) announced that its activists will re-install the barricades in the state capital and elsewhere, many of which were dismantled when the federal police moved in two weeks ago. APPO's Zenen Bravo Castellanos said the delegates also decided to retake over both state and municipal public buildings, and block highways. "The purpose is to demonstrate that there is no governability in this state," Bravo said. (El Universal, Nov. 14)

Las Abejas arrive in Oaxaca

From EFE, Nov. 12 via Chiapas95 (our translation):

OAXACA - A group of 250 indigenous from the community of Acteal in Chiapas state marched today in the city of Oaxaca and held a religious ritual in support of peace for this state, which has suffered a political conflict since almost six months ago.

Ethnic warfare in Chiapas rainforest?

From El Universal, Nov. 14 (our translation, links added):

OCOSINGO, Chiapas -- The organization Maderas del Pueblo [Timber for the People], which has a presence in the Selva Lacandona, confirmed that up to nine campesinos were assassinated in the comunity of Viejo Velasco.

Oaxaca: McDonalds fire-bombed

From AP, Nov. 12 (links added):

OAXACA, Mexico -- Four youths wearing masks tossed gasoline bombs at a McDonald's restaurant in the conflict-torn city of Oaxaca on Sunday, damaging the windows, seats and play area, police said.

Mexico admits torture in Atenco case

From El Universal, Nov. 9 via Chiapas95 (our translation):

GENEVA, Switzerland - The Federal Prosecutor of the Republic [PGR] admitted that following the police operation of this past May in San Salvador Atenco, sexual abuses and torture were committed against detained women.

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