Resistencia Visual: Street Art From the Popular Movement in Oaxaca, Mexico: April 26th-May 24th: Opening Thursday April 26th 7pm: ABC No Rio

Resistencia Visual
Street Art From the Popular Movement in Oaxaca, Mexico
April 26th-May 24th
Opening Thursday April 26th 7pm

ABC No Rio
156 Rivington St (btn Clinton & Suffolk St)
(212)254-3697
www.abcnorio.org

This exhibit is made up of woodblock prints and stencils made by ASAR-O
(Oaxacan Assembly of Revolutionary Artists), a collective involved in
the
popular movement APPO in Oaxaca, Mexico. ASAR-O formed in October of
2006,
respinding to the call of the APPO (Popular Assembly of the People of
Oaxaca) a diverse movement of civil society in Southern Mexico. With the
goal that “all sectors will organize themselves to resist and unite
in the
struggle against the tyranny of a government that represents the
interests
of the wealthy…”

Come out to see an exciting glimpse of the work that has been
produced for
“mega-marches” and painting on the walls of Oaxaca City. Its an
inspiring
body of work that makes the demands of the movement visually.

The exhibit will run April 26th-May 24th
Sundays 1-3pm
Wednesday & Thursdays 5-7pm

Thursday May 7th 7pm
Proyecto Autogestion will screen “el machete: la lucha por el poder
popular”
a documnentary filmed and edited by indigenous people of CODEP(Committee
Organized in Defense of the People’s Rights) in Oaxaca.
http://elenemigocomun.net/878

Thursday May 10th 7pm
Discussion with James Wechsler on Mexican Art and Politics of 1920’s &
30’s. Possibility of other speakers. James is an independant scholar
based
in NYC who worked with the Philadelphia Museum of Art on the exhibit
Mexico & Modern Printmaking.
http://www.philamuseum.org/exhibitions/special/103.html
The exhibit can be seen in the near future at The Phoenix Art Museum,
Phoenix, Arizona. From June 29–September 16, 2007

For more info about ASAR-O and their work check out
http://web.mac.com/dfteitel/iWeb/ASAR-O/Home%20-%20Inicio.html

This exhibit has been brought to you by:
Visual Resistance
www.visualresistance.org
CASA
http://www.chiapaspeacehouse.org/

Exhibition Funded in part by the NYS Council on the Arts
and Dedalus Foundation

Brad: We'll KEEP ON FIGHTING- SCREENING TONIGHT

If you missed it at the Anarchist Film Festival — people are gathering Monday Night for
a screening of “Brad: We’ll Keep on Fighting” with one of the filmmakers
(and Brad’s friend) from Brazil. The film features both Brad’s own footage
of interviews with the MST and others, as well as interviews with community
members that admired Brad’s work and his bravery that in memoriam.

Note that all of our regular 7pm slots at the store were booked — so we decided to host this late night following an event that I know Brad would have come to. See below.

Monday, April 23rd @ 9:30PM – $5 Suggested @ Bluestockings
Screening: “Brad: We’ll Keep On Fighting”
Come join us late for a screening of “Brad Will: We’ll Keep On Fighting”

Monday, April 23rd @ 7PM – Free
Reading: Clayton Patterson “Resistance”
Patterson’s “Resistance: A Radical Political History of the Lower East
Side” documents the lives and struggles of the radicals, artists and immigrants=
that populated and politicized one of America=E2=80=99s strangest and
most beloved neighborhoods. Join us for regaling first-person tales of the batt=
les, triumphs, failures, and lives of this neighborhood.

Associated Press Fires Oaxaca Correspondent Rebeca Romero- REJOICE!

Associated Press Fires Oaxaca Correspondent Rebeca Romero
Undisclosed Conflicts of Interest and “a Consistent Pattern of Sensationalizing Protester Violence while Sanitizing State Violence through Misreporting”

By John Gibler
Special to The Narco News Bulletin
April 5, 2007

The Associated Press fired Oaxaca state correspondent Rebeca Romero due to pro-government bias in her coverage of a six-month-long protest movement that sought to oust the state governor, Ulises Ruiz Ortiz, according to AP reporters familiar with the agency’s work in Mexico.

Jack Stokes, the Manager of Media Relations for the AP declined to comment.

“We rarely comment on personnel issues, including the comings and goings of our paid-by-the-story freelancers around the world,” Mr. Stokes wrote in an email response to questions.

Ms. Romero violated the AP’s code of ethics by accepting payment from the Oaxaca state government for advertisements posted on her website, according to a January 9, 2007 report by Narco News.

Ms. Romero, a former press secretary for the Mexican federal attorney general, also owns an electronic news agency, ADN Sureste (Southeast Digital News Agency). ADN Sureste ran paid advertisements for the Oaxaca state government while Ms. Romero was reporting on the government’s involvement in the conflict, in violation of the AP’s code of ethics.

According to AP reporters familiar with the agency’s work in Mexico, however, the AP fired Ms. Romero as a result of her coverage of the Oaxaca conflict.

Ms. Romero confirmed that she is no longer writing for the AP.

“I am a honest reporter and I am clean, so I don’t have nothing to worry about,” Ms. Romero wrote in an email response to questions.

A review of 15 articles written by Ms. Romero between July and November 2006, show that she cited or quoted twice as many government officials as protesters. Those protesters cited were typically leaders of the teachers union and Oaxaca People’s Popular Assembly (APPO) refuting state claims of their involvement in specific acts of violence.

All the “people on the street” quotes were uniformly critical of the protesters, even though there were tens of thousands of people not associated with any union or political organization that supported the protest movement available to be interviewed.

Ms. Romero did not publish a single article during that time attempting to explain the protesters’ motivations or profile a rank-and-file member of the protest movement.

A review of Ms. Romero’s coverage of the Oaxaca conflict shows a consistent pattern of sensationalizing protester violence while sanitizing state violence through misreporting.

Protesters did engage in acts of property destruction, occasionally apprehended with force suspected police or criminals, on two occasions in November engaged federal police in street battles, and in rare circumstances toward the end of the conflict were seen firing pistols at police attackers—yet no police were ever reported to be wounded by protester gunfire, and in the vast majority of protest actions APPO organizers made a concerted and public effort to avoid acts of violence. Most of the acts of protester violence occurred in October and November, months after para-police had begun to attack and kill protesters.

The state government, in fact, has been widely implicated in organizing para-police units responsible for killing at least 20 people, according to the national Mexican newspapers Milenio, El Universal, and La Jornada, as well as the Mexican National Human Rights Commission and the International Civil Commission for Human Rights Observation.

Ms Romero’s reporting typically obscured the context or time sequence in which violent para-police acts took place, blurring protester responses and police attacks into ambiguous “clashes.”

In several articles Ms. Romero mentioned that police fired on protesters, that people died “in the clashes,” and that “armed gangs” were involved. Never did she report on the documented involvement of local and state police officers in the un-uniformed “armed gangs,” even though such “para-police” groups were filmed and shown on national television and widely covered by the Mexican national press.

Also, all of the killings that took place between August and October involved police ambushes of protester camps and barricades. There were no armed clashes between protesters and police during this time.

One protester fired a pistol in the air during a confrontation in late September, but was quickly admonished by fellow protesters and forced to cease firing.

The first exchange of gunfire took place on October 27, 2006 when a few protesters responded to attacks by firing on groups of plainclothes police and local officials from Santa Lucia del Camino. The police and local officials who initiated the confrontation firing upon the protesters, wounded at least 8 people including a Milenio photographer and killed New York Indymedia journalist Brad Will.

Ms. Romero reported on the state attorney general’s claim that the APPO was an “urban guerrilla” movement, but failed to report on the federal attorney general’s refutation of that claim. This disagreement between the state and federal governments concerning the involvement of armed guerrilla movements in the APPO was widely reported in the Mexican national press.

Ms. Romero’s coverage consistently exaggerated protester violence by implicating the protesters in the armed attacks carried out against them, and by continuing to mention isolated acts of property destruction implying that they occurred daily.

In five distinct articles published between July 23 and August 11, Ms. Romero printed the same sentence with only minor copy edits to characterize the protesters:

“Since then, thousands of teachers, unionists, and leftists have camped out in the plaza, spray-painting buildings with revolutionary slogans, smashing hotel windows and erecting makeshift barricades.”

This characterization, reprinted in five distinct articles over a three-week period, implies that protesters had continued to do all the activities listed. While the protesters had indeed continued to occupy the plaza and spray paint walls, they did not smash windows or erect new barricades during this time (they would do so later).

Ms. Romero misreported events in Oaxaca and even contradicted her own AP reports during an August 25, 2006 radio interview with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.

Ms. Romero said that the teachers and the APPO became “a very violent, violent movement” consisting of “radical groups” and that most of them “are armed groups linked to the Ejercito Popular Revolucionario” (Popular Revolutionary Army, or EPR).

There is no evidence of armed guerrilla groups such as the EPR participating in the Oaxaca conflict, and even the Mexican federal attorney general’s office denied all claims that guerrilla movements were involved. Only the governor and the Oaxaca state prosecutor consistently alleged such involvement.

During the CBC interview, Ms. Romero said that it was impossible to determine how people had died during the conflict, evading all discussion of well-documented state police involvement in armed assassinations.

Ms. Romero even contradicted one of her own AP stories. On August 11, 2006 Ms. Romero published an article with the headline “Gunmen kill 1 protestor in Mexico.” Her first sentence reads:

“A protester was shot dead when assailants fired on a march of about 8,000 people…”

However, in her August 25 CBC interview, Ms. Romero claims that the victim, Jose Jimenez Colmenares, had urinated on a house prompting a fight with the homeowners who then shot Mr. Colmenares. The Oaxaca state attorney general put forth this version of the events, which was widely discredited by the national press, most of whom had correspondents present in the march when the shots were fired.

Throughout the six-month conflict Ms. Romero’s reporting evidenced disdain for the protest movement, sensationalizing and misreporting acts of protester property destruction and violence, while failing to report on the state government’s involvement in the killing of protesters, which was widely reported on in the national press.

At the time of her reporting, Ms. Romero received payments from the state government for advertisements on her website.

Several individuals sent complaints to the AP, but the agency failed to take action, defending Ms. Romero’s reporting against charges of bias.

A few months later, however, the AP fired her.

Networking Gatherings to Watch a Special on Oaxaca on Latinos Based National Television and Mobilize: April 19, 9pm

Ana Cardona wrote:

OAXACA TV PROGRAM AND DISCUSSION

Greetings,

Mi name is Maricruz Badia, I am the outreach coordinator for HITN, the channel that educates and entertains, the first national public television network for Latinos in the United States. I am writing because on Thursday April 19 at 9 PM Eastern Time, we will broadcast a new edition of our production Latinoamerica Hoy about the current social movement in Oaxaca.

This Latinoamerica Hoy program will present the premier in Spanish of the documentary “Land, Rain and Fire: Report from Oaxaca” produced by social independent filmmaker Tami Gold and Gerardo Renique professor and writer of Latin American History. Following the documentary journalist Juan Carlos Fernández will moderate a live discussion on the current status of the social movement in Oaxaca with Gold, Renique and a journalist from that region in Mexico. The viewers will be able to call in and send emails during the discussion. We will also present “El Golpe” a 12 minute video that gives an update of the current struggle in Oaxaca.

We want to work with communities who are supportive of the movement in Oaxaca to make sure that as many people as possible tune in and participate in the program.

For this reason, my department is seeking to collaborate with groups or individuals interested in this topic to coordinate gatherings the day of the broadcast in centers, churches or homes around the US.

If you are interested in organizing a gathering in your community or if you know of a group that might be interested, please call or email me as soon as possible at 1-800-294-4486 ext. 3801 or mbadia@hitn.org

I hope we’re in touch soon. Scroll further down for information on the documentary and the producers.

Gracias,
Maricruz

PD:
HITN can be watched in all of the United States through the following satellite channels: 438 on Direct TV, and 843 & 9401 on Dish Network. HITN can also be viewed through the following cable systems:

CA: San Francisco, Oakland, San Jose & Santa Clara (AT&T U-verse, ch 3055)
CA: Watsonville, Capitola, Central, San Luis Obispo, West Sacramento & Turlock (Charter Cable, ch 264)
CO: Denver (Comcast, ch 649)
CT: New Haven, Hartford & Stamford (AT&T U-verse, ch 3055)
IN: Indianapolis (AT&T U-verse, ch 3055)
MO: Kansas City (Time Warner Cable, ch 167)
NJ: Parts of the counties of Bergen & Hudson (Time Warner Cable, ch 811)
NV: Reno (Charter Cable, ch 264)
NY: Manhattan, Queens & Brooklyn (Time Warner Cable, ch 811)
TX: Austin (Time Warner Cable, ch 645)
TX: Houston & San Antonio (AT&T U-verse, ch 3055)
TX: San Antonio (Time Warner Cable, ch 294)
WA: Statewide (Charter Cable, ch 264)

Hispanic Information and Telecommunications Network, Inc. (HITN) is the first and only Latino/Spanish-language public television network providing educational and cultural programming in the United States. HITN was founded in 1987 with the intention of advancing the educational, cultural, socioeconomic and political aspirations of Latinos living in the US. Some of HITN’s programming highlights include: GED en Español, a series that prepares viewers to obtain their high school diploma; EASY English, a series of classes to teach Spanish speakers basic and intermediate English language skills; Dialogo de Costa a Costa, a daily live talk show that provides a forum for Latinos to call in live to give their opinions and ask questions on key issues affecting their families and communities; and Latinoamerica Hoy a live discussion program that provides the audience the opportunity to watch documentaries and discuss topics of current interest throughout Latin American. For more information visit: www.hitn.org.