Oaxaca workshop Tuesday- February 20, Providence, RI- 6pm

Taking it to the Streets
A Workshop & Report
from Oaxaca

with Alfonso,
Member of CIPO – RFM (a Magonista indigenous organization in Oaxaca)
& Eric Larson
IWW delegate, recently returned from Oaxaca

“This part of Santa Lucia is enemy territory. It is near Barricade Three, the Príista attack of last Friday, and the site of Brad Will’s murder. It’s also where the CIPO house is located…Now, less than a week after Brad Will’s murder, some of the same Príistas have agreed to “dislodge” CIPO from the neighborhood. If history, recent and distant, teaches us anything, their method will be violence. It is important that they know that acts of violence will not go unseen, even in this small neighborhood that they control. Please contact some or all of those listed below; tell them that if CIPO is attacked, that the Mexican state is responsible. And please also keep this in mind as solidarity actions are planned and carried out.”

Join us to learn more about this important struggle, and about what we can do.

Tuesday, Feb. 20, 2007, 6pm
DARE
340 Lockwood Street, Providence
Call 351-6960 for more information

Community Radio Stations Under Fire – Arrests- Death Threats- Mexico – IPS

http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=36425

MEXICO:
Community Radio Stations Under Fire
Diego Cevallos

MEXICO CITY, Feb 2 (IPS) – One of the 12 community radio stations operating legally in Mexico has literally come under fire, and its journalists have received death threats and been arrested; another has received warnings for covering the activities of social movements; and a third was closed down at gunpoint by supporters of the local government.

All three cases have been reported to the authorities. The first case, involving the Calenda station in the southern state of Oaxaca, reached the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights Thursday, through a complaint filed by the World Association of Community Radio Broadcasters (AMARC).

Aleida Calleja, who represents AMARC in Mexico, told IPS that the three radio stations, which have limited broadcasting reach and do not respond to commercial interests, are in need of protection.

“Freedom of speech is at stake here,” she said.

In January, the mayor of the town of San Antonino Castillo de Velasco, who was overthrown by protests, “opened fire on one of my colleagues, although he missed; another almost lost an eye when stones were thrown at him; and I was arrested and received death threats, and was later forced to sign a document in which I promised not to support subversive activities,” Darío Campos, a volunteer reporter at the Calenda station, told IPS.

Since mid-2006, the station, which broadcasts in San Antonino, a town of 4,900 near Oaxaca, the state capital, has been the target of the rage of the town’s former mayor, who belongs to the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), which has governed the state since 1929.

“For giving coverage to the social uprising and airspace to APPO (the Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca), which here in our community toppled the mayor, our radio station and its staff (of 10) have been attacked,” Campos said by telephone from San Antonino.

In the capital of Oaxaca and several neighbouring towns like Antonino, APPO led a months-long uprising last year against Governor Ulises Ruiz, of the PRI, demanding that he resign or be removed for corruption and for violently squashing dissent.

Along with neighbouring states Chiapas and Guerrero, Oaxaca is one of the poorest states in this country of 104 million. In Oaxaca, 80 percent of the population lacks basic sanitation services, street lighting, piped water and paved streets, according to the Oaxacan Human Rights Network.

The conflict began in June, when APPO, an umbrella group made up of more than 300 social organisations, took shape and its members occupied the centre of the city of Oaxaca.

But thousands of federal police were deployed to the area to break up the protests and seize control of the city in late October, and dozens of activists were arrested. Human rights groups reported numerous human rights abuses.

During the months of protests, around 20 people, mainly demonstrators, were killed when unidentified gunmen opened fire on the protesters. One of those killed was a U.S. journalist.

“We merely give support to the community, which includes providing information and supporting efforts in health, community organisation and other areas,” said Campos, a 25-year-old economics student.

Neither Campos nor most of his colleagues receive any pay for their volunteer work at the radio station.

Community radio stations generally enjoy broad local support for the services they offer their communities, such as educational programming, coverage on human rights and health questions, or information and warnings on dangers like natural disasters. In addition, they often broadcast in local dialects, such as indigenous tongues in Mexico.

The AMARC complaint states that the Calenda station is facing threats aimed at “silencing it.”

The complaint filed with the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights is aimed at getting the regional body to order the Mexican state to take the necessary measures to safeguard the life and physical integrity of the radio station’s members, and to guarantee their right to freedom of expression.

Calleja said the Nandia indigenous radio station, which operated in a Mazateca community in the state of Oaxaca, had also suffered reprisals at the hands of PRI supporters during the APPO uprising.

“Nandia was shut down at gunpoint last year and remains closed despite the complaints that we have filed,” said Calleja.

Another community station that has had problems is the La Voladora station in Amecameca, a mountainous area in the state of Mexico, near the capital.

The station’s staff members have been the targets of death threats and verbal attacks because of their reporting on the indigenous Zapatista National Liberation Army (EZLN) and other social movements.

Of the more than 130 radio stations in Mexico that describe themselves as community stations, only 12 — the ones that are backed by AMARC — have licences to operate. The rest, which include stations run by church groups or trade unions, face a permanent risk of being closed down.

Although the National Chamber of the Radio and Television Industry accuses community radio stations of fomenting piracy and encouraging guerrilla groups like the EZLN, the government of conservative former President Vicente Fox, whose six-year term ended in December, granted operating licences to 12 stations in 2004 and 2005.

The permits, which the local branch of AMARC had been demanding since the 1990s, were issued in a vaguely defined legal framework that gives the state enormous discretionary power over community stations.

AMARC is an international non-governmental organisation serving the community radio movement, with associates in 110 countries. Its goal is “to support and contribute to the development of community and participatory radio along the principles of solidarity and international cooperation.” (END/2007)

FILM: Global Fights for Human Rights: Stories from Croatia, Democratic Republic of Congo and Mexico: Wednesday, February 14th 7:00pm

On February 14th, NewFilmmakers Series, Third World Newsreel and WITNESS will present Global Fights for Human Rights: Stories from Croatia, Democratic Republic of Congo and Mexico, a program featuring three new documentaries about human rights struggles in Europe, Africa and Latin America. Filmmakers Tami Gold and Gerardo Renique will present their new documentary Land, Rain & Fire: Report from Oaxaca along with new footage from Oaxaca, Mexico.

Wednesday, February 14th
7PM-8:30PM
Anthology Film Archives
32 2nd Avenue at 2nd Street
Ticket price: $5

NewFilmmakers Series, Third World Newsreel and Witness present

Global Fight for Human Rights:
Stories from Croatia, Democratic Republic of Congo and Mexico

Come join us for a special presentation of three new documentaries about contemporary human rights struggles in Europe, Africa and Latin America. Whether it is people with intellectual disabilities in Croatia, youth with HIV/AIDS in the Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo or public school teachers in Mexico, Global Fight for Human Rights features diverse stories about people struggling to improve their lives.

After the screening, new footage from Oaxaca, Mexico will be shown by filmmakers Tami Gold and Gerardo Renique.

For more information, please contact Third World Newsreel at (212) 947-9277 ext. 304 or at twn@twn.org.

*******************************************

LIVING PROOF: THE RIGHT TO LIVE IN THE COMMUNITY
In Croatia, one in three people with moderate or severe intellectual disabilities live in institutions, segregated and isolated from the rest of society. Contrary to prevailing stereotypes and deeply-ingrained stigma, people with intellectual disabilities have the right and the ability to live as independently as possible and to be included in the community. By describing the daily experiences and presenting the opinions of people with intellectual disabilities, Living Proof demonstrates the importance of providing community-based programs and achieving change in the social welfare system and in society as a whole.
20 minutes, video

AWAITING TOMORROW
Awaiting Tomorrow profiles young women and men living with HIV/AIDS in the Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) where the on-going conflict has claimed some four million lives. Through their personal stories, the film explores how the effects of HIV/AIDS are compounded by the conflict and insecurity of the region. Facing stigma in their families, lacking adequate nutrition and access to health care, these young persons bravely confront the disease and “await tomorrow.”
15 minutes, video

LAND, RAIN AND FIRE: REPORT FROM OAXACA
What began as a teachers’ strike for better wages and more resources for students has erupted into a massive movement for profound social change in the state of Oaxaca. On June 14, at 4:20 AM, the police made a surprise attack. The more than fifty thousand teachers camped out with their children were awakened to tear gas, pepper spray and helicopters. But the attack backfired as public anger transformed the strike into an unprecedented democratic insurgency, demanding the resignation of Governor Ruiz. Hundreds of unions, indigenous and women’s organizations, neighborhood groups, students and professional associations came together and created The Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca (APPO) and a massive campaign of nonviolent civil disobedience has brought the state government to a standstill. Part of the Call for Change Series 2007.
Tami Gold and Gerardo Renique, 30 minutes, 2006

For the Love of Brad

For the Love of Brad in two parts.

Part 1 (You are my sunshine)

For the Love of Brad in two parts. The first part is a music video (6 min) Select Quicktime format. ALLOW VIDEOS 5min+ to load before viewing. I made this film with J’s footage, after Brad was killed on October 27, 2006 in Oaxaca Mexico, while filming. Brad was shot by a government sniper. He was there to document a popular uprising of the poor and dispossessed in Oaxaca, Mexico. “For the Love of Brad” is not so much about how he died but a glimpse of how Brad lived and who he was. Part Two (24 …More
For the Love of Brad in two parts. The first part is a music video (6 min) Select Quicktime format. ALLOW VIDEOS 5min+ to load before viewing. I made this film with J’s footage, after Brad was killed on October 27, 2006 in Oaxaca Mexico, while filming. Brad was shot by a government sniper. He was there to document a popular uprising of the poor and dispossessed in Oaxaca, Mexico. “For the Love of Brad” is not so much about how he died but a glimpse of how Brad lived and who he was. Part Two (24 min) consists of Brad speaking, and joking around and songs he plays and sings, including “Angel From Montgomery,” “Drop of Water,” “If I Had a Dollar..,” and just a little bit of “Green & Black,” the famous anarchist love song. But he didn’t really know that one too well back in 2000, when J shot this footage when we were hanging out in Amsterdam after we’d been to the World Bank riots in Prague. In Part Two, Brad is informally conversing with J about issues he cares deeply about, like climate change. (We were in the Nederlands partly to protest at the U.N climate change conference that year in Den Haag.) Brad is also pondering recent events like the uprising in Seattle, the future of dissent, the state of the world. There are some stunning, prophetic and haunting moments as he reveals the musings of his heart and feelings on life and death. When Brad is joking around or singing, its almost like having him in the room. Almost…. The loss of Brad is immeasurable. He was one of those people that was sensetive to the suffering of others and really good at cheering one up with his own joy and songs. He was one of the few who could really lift my heart which is now heavy with sorrow. Even so, watching him sing and laugh makes me feel better. I made this video so his friends and family would feel better, and so that those who didn’t know him so well could see why we loved him so goddamned much and why we will miss him forever. Brad’s death is still completely unreal, insane to me… but it is real all the same. He signed his emails “B Rad” and so we shall be… – Priya

Part 2

Part Two is 24 min. This is our lovely Brad. When the sadness consumes so utterly that there is no space for anything else, and you can barely breathe… remember what is was that infused us with so much joy, the love that radiated… Brad was dazzling in the way he lit this world with his brightness. I will never get used to the idea of not seeing him again. We used to live together, squat together, and I went where he went or he came where I was, when we needed a roof over our heads. We even squatted the NYC Indymedia before the authoritarians took it over, or as Brad called it, “the liberal sectarian coup,” after which, we left because they were hostile to anarchists. This time, I cannot go where he has gone, and it feels really weird. I feel lost, as if I don’t really belong here either. A Greek friend told me that when they lose someone they love, at the funeral, they will chant “Z! Z!” (or some word pronounced like that) which means, “Live! Live!” as in, “we must live!” We must live as Brad did, in defiance of fascism, grief and all that tears apart the fabric of human dignity. “Live as brave men; and if fortune is adverse, front its blows with brave hearts.” – Cicero (106 BC – 43 BC) Brad’s work is undone. Seems only the good die young, before their song is sung, before the day is done, before the war is won, before the bell is rung. Though sometimes grief consumes like a dark night with no stars, we must not give in to despair. We must carry on, for Brad, and for the revolution for which he gave his life. Brad, where ever you are, I hope you are warm, that your soul is free and surrounded by love. I hope the dumpsters are overflowing with unsullied organic produce in your heaven. At least you don’t have to worry about Capitalism anymore. It is the living who suffer now. The people of Oaxaca are a great example of courage and strength, for they have not given into terror, intimidation, sorrow or the weight of poverty. They hold something more important than fear in their hearts, something more important than despair. They have not given and neither must we. Our hearts are broken, but our guns are smokin… We will unleash hell on those who took our sunshine away.- Priya ..

NY Anarchist Film Festival Call for Submissions

New York Anarchist Film Festival to Honor Brad Will

Seeking Submissions!

Deadline March 25th, 2007

The New York Anarchist Bookfair and Film Festival will take place April 13-15, 2007 in the belly of the beast, New York City.

The First Ever New York Anarchist Film Festival will honor the life and work of Brad Will, a friend and comrade killed by a government sniper in Oaxaca Mexico on October 27, 2006. We will screen a cut of Brad’s remarkable footage that documents a determined revolutionary people’s uprising in Oaxaca, Mexico.

The New York Anarchist Film Festival is now accepting submissions. We are seeking videos & multi-media pertaining to people’s movements & uprisings. The shorter the better. Rebellious, strong insurrectionary & diverse subversive political & cultural content encouraged.

Contact:
WarcryCinema at
priya.warcry (at) yahoo.com

For the Love of Brad- in Two Parts- Video and Poetry for Brad by Priya

Priya thought Brad’s friends who come to this website, might like to see him
playing music and talking and laughing.

http://warcrycinema.blip.tv/

Anarchist Film Fest in Brad Will's name and spirit April 13-17 NYC

Priya states- Thought you might want to see the flier I made for the
Anarchist Film Festival honoring Brad in April.

Also, if anyone of Brad’s friends out there want to
submit something or know someone who does, or even
have a suggestion… please contact me. Wanna make a
film festival that would make Brad proud… in the
spirit of revolution and its terrible bitter beauty.

http://baltimore.indymedia.org/newswire/display/14567/index.php