Dear Sisters and Brothers,
Once more we ask you to walk with
us and shout "Ya Basta! Enough is Enough."
Once more we ask you to walk with
us for globalized human rights.
Once more we ask you to walk with
us against the transcendence
of multinational interests.
On May 31st,
to June 1, 2002, EST.
Join the Electronic Disturbance
Theater's
Virtual Sit-In:
http://www.thing.net/~rdom/ecd/ecd.html
Against President Fox's Support
of the "Plan Puebla Panama" in Mexico.
And In Support of Labor and Indigenous
Right's In Mexico.
This Electronic Disturbance Theater
Performance
Is Sponsored By
The Berkman Center For Internet & Society
At Harvard Law School.
Once more we ask you to walk with
us against the policies of the Mexican
government that run counter to the interests of indigenous peoples
and
workers in Mexico. President Fox is supporting multinationals with
measures that erode civil rights, human rights and labor rights.
*On June 14, 2001, President Vicente
Fox stated; "The Plan Puebla Panama
is a thousand times more [important] than Zapatismo, or any indigenous
community in Chiapas." *
*The Plan Puebla Panama encompasses:
the construction of hydroelectric
dams (42 within the conflict zone of Chiapas alone), highways, platforms
for petroleum extraction, gold and uranium mines; the creation of
African
palm and eucalyptus plantations; and licensing for multinational
corporations
to engage in bio-prospecting and tree felling. These projects will
not
respect the rights of indigenous peoples to control and protect their
land,
to decide the future of their own development, nor to be consulted
about
any government program that may affect them (rights which are guaranteed
by International Labor Organizations' (ILO) Convention 169 on Indigenous
and Tribal Peoples in Independent Countries, which Mexico signed).*
More information at:
http://chiapas.indymedia.org/display.php3?article_id=102471
http://www.ezln.org
The rights of Indigenous communities
of Chiapas are now being overridden by
the policies being pushed forward by President Fox's commitment to
social
control and promoting Chiapas as "a very secure market for investors."
The
United Nations has designated 2002 as "the year of the mountains"
and
at the request of the Mexican government--according to a bulletin
dated
March ,1 2002 from the National Forestry Council of Mexico--the UN
has
declared, through its Security Council, that "forests are [now]
a matter of
international security." This is a generic policy, meaning it
could be
applied to any forest area anywhere in the world. This is an extremely
dangerous policy aimed at expelling people from any forest area in
the globe so exploiters can get at its natural resources.
For further information on Plan
Puebla Panama you can go to:
http://www.ciepac.org/ppp.htm
http://www.thing.net/~rdom/ecd/NOPPP/ppp.html
Maquiladoras in Mexico's Free Trade
Zones violate Mexican labor laws
with impunity, often assuming that workers will not have the resources
or the knowledge to fight for their rights. In many cases, foreign
companies
make partnerships with "phantom unions", entities that are
designed
only to serve the interests of corporations by blocking the establishment
of independent unions inside maquiladoras. Most recently, Pung Kook
of Mexico S.A. of C.V. (that provides services for such international
firms
as Adidas, Lands End, Patagonia and Danna), has refused to heed the
orders of the Arbitration and Conciliation Board in Tijuana to reinstate
Raquel Espinoza, a woman maquiladora worker who was unjustly fired
from her job at the plant.
*Raquel Espinoza has been a maquiladora
worker since 1974.
Since August 3, 1998, she has been an employee at Pung Kook
of Mexico, S.A. de C.V. working as a computer operator.Her workday
runs from 7:30am to 5:30pm, Monday through Friday and 7:30am
to 1:00pm on Saturdays. She was unjustly fired on June 11, 2001.
At the time of her firing her salary was 50 pesos/day ($5.45 US),
which is two pesos less than the minimum professional wage
at that time.On April 29, 2002, at 8:50am, Raquel was notified
of decision of the Local Arbitration Board dated March first, 2002,
]in which the following resolution which was unanimously supported
by the Board members stated that:
*C. Raquel Espinoza, authentically
verified the actions that were described
in her first petition.*
*The Pung Kok of Mexico, S.A. de
C.V. company is thus ordered to
reinstate the worker C. Raquel Espinoza to the job that she carried
out with the same terms and conditions, in conformity with this decision.*
*Weeks before the issuance of the
resolution by the Arbitration Board, on
the 1st and 2nd of May, the Mexican representative of the maquiladora,
named Jesus Guerrero Alvarez, ordered the directors of the phantom
union
formed by the company and certain trusted workers, to generate a climate
of violence and threats against Raquel Espinoza and Tito Piñeda,
advisor
to the independent Union of Workers of the Maquiladora Industry of
Baja California Sur.*
It is now the end of May 2002 and
we have not seeing any sign from this
company that it will comply with the law for the "Peaceful Reinstatement
of Raquel Espinoza".
http://www.petitiononline.com/XFACTOR/petition.html
http://www.maquilasolidarity.org/alerts/pungkookreport.htm
Once more we ask you to walk with
us and shout "Ya Basta! Enough is Enough."
Once more we ask you to walk with
for globalized human rights.
Once more we ask you to walk with
us and against the transcendence
of multinational interests.
On May 31st,
to June 1, 2002, EST.
Join the Electronic Disturbance
Theater's
Virtual Sit-In:
Against President Fox's Support
of the "Plan Puebla Panama" in Mexico.
And In Support of Labor and Indigenous
Right's In Mexico.
This Electronic Disturbance Theater
Performance
Is Sponsored By
The Berkman Center For Internet & Society
At Harvard Law School.
To Join the
Virtual Sit-In Click this URL on May 31st, 2002 EST.
http://www.thing.net/~rdom/ecd/ecd.html
EDT
SCRAPBOOK