E/CN.4/2004/80/Add.2
page 15
43.
The Government authorities stoutly maintain that there are no paramilitary groups in
Mexico. Following the Zapatista uprising, the army presence in Chiapas increased considerably
and there have been many complaints about the militarization of indigenous areas. There is
speculation as to the number of troops in the area, and the Ministry of National Defence reports
that 15,000 soldiers are currently based in military region VII. The presence of military camps
and bases near indigenous communities, and military patrols and checkpoints on the roads,
contribute to a climate that is ripe for provocation and friction with the civilian population.
Under the current administration the army has made efforts to expand its “social work” among
the population. In 2001 the Government ordered the Mexican Army to fall back from the seven
military positions requested by EZLN in order to resume dialogue, and released the majority of
the prisoners involved in the conflict.
The Acteal massacre
The slaughter of 46 unarmed civilians in Acteal in December 1997 by a group of individuals
armed with high-powered weapons is probably the most serious and dramatic incident that has
occurred in the conflict in Chiapas. The National Human Rights Commission established that
various public officials in the State government were responsible by commission or omission.
Many people in the municipality of Chenalhó were arrested, charged and tried for these
murders. Although some were subsequently released for lack of evidence, it is reported that
others remain unjustly imprisoned and regard themselves as victims of religious intolerance.
The human rights organizations assert that the individuals who masterminded the massacre are
still free and unpunished. Six years after the events, the crime has not been fully clarified nor
has justice been done, while the population affected continues to suffer the consequences.
44.
The presence of paramilitary groups has been reported, in Oaxaca, Guerrero and other
States, contributing to an environment of insecurity and harassment for indigenous communities
amidst environmental, agrarian, political and social conflicts, sometimes linked to guerrilla
groups or organized crime, and the presence of the Mexican Army. In other areas (for example,
in the Tarahumara Sierra) the indigenous communities accept the presence of the military
because they help to restrain the violence associated with conflicts sparked off by livestock,
logging and drug-trafficking interests.
45.
Many human rights organizations informed the Special Rapporteur that the military on
occasion participate in civilian public security operations and criminal investigations that fall
outside their constitutional mandate: numerous checkpoints and searches on main and secondary
roads, for example, arbitrary arrests and detention; body searches and inspection of possessions,
raids on communities and properties, intimidating interrogations, death threats, extrajudicial or
summary executions and sexual harassment and abuse of indigenous women, to mention only
some of the complaints.