Linked with
Guatemala in colonial days, Chiapas became a Mexican
state in 1824; its
boundaries were fixed in 1882. The early
Maya ruins of Palenque, now accessible to
tourists, are in the northeastern rain forest;
Tuxtla is the state capital. Area 28,653 square miles
(74,211 square km). Pop. (1990 prelim.) 3,203,915.
Estado ("state") of southern Mexico. It is bounded southwest by the
Gulf of Tehuantepec and the
Pacific Ocean, east by
Guatemala. Its territory is mountainous and forested. The mountainous region of the
Sierra Madre, in the south, includes a fertile, temperate
plateau inhabited by most of the state's population, mainly Indians, but
isolation and
lack of
transportation facilities have retarded its
development. In 1994, however, Chiapas
was the scene of an armed
uprising against the federal government. The rebels consisted of impoverished Indians protesting the
expulsion of many others from their
farmlands and forest tracts by large-scale cattle ranchers and loggers.
Chiapas is the most resource-rich state in
Mexico, including the agricultural production of
coffee,
corn and
cocoa, the growth of cattle-ranching,
hydroelectric power, and timber harvested at irresponsible rates from the
Lacandona rainforest and has some of the richest
oil reserves in Mexico. At the same time,
poverty and the level of infrastructure in the form of schools, hospitals, and basic services remain
abysmal. The strengthening of large landholders and their private armies which has such a large
indigenous population also contributes to the repression in Chiapas. The systematic brutalization of indigenous communities and the tight control of the political machinery that allowed for no democratic openings constitute the conditions
against which the
Zapatistas organized.
NAFTA is a key factor, since it sells off Mexican sovereignty and further erodes the autonomy of indigenous communities. The
Zapatistas have insisted that the further privatization of land means the death of
indigenous culture.
Since the
Zapatista uprising in 1994, more than a third of the state has been heavily militarized. The army has completed a major road project connecting previously inaccessible communities to main population centers and facilitating
troop movement, and has built permanent installations in dozens of communities. All this has significantly altered the local economy and culture.
There are now between 25,000 and 30,000 soldiers permanently installed in the regions of the state that are
Zapatista strongholds. The army has taken over the
state police forces of Chiapas, and is further augmented
by the presence of thousands of federal "public security" and judicial police. There are 17 major military
barracks and 44 semi-permanent military installations in the conflict zone-and
a soldier for every three or
four inhabitants in many communities. In addition, the
Coordinating Group of Nongovernmental Organizations for Peace (CONPAZ) has identified seven different
paramilitary groups operating in the area. In the two months prior to the 1997 elections, dozens of people were killed and wounded in local confrontations between the
Partido Revolucionario Institucional and the PRD, and as victims of paramilitary and
federal police forces.
Sources:
- Why Mexico's Massacre Was No Surprise; Op-Ed; Juan Enriquez; New York Times, New
York, N.Y.; Dec 27, 1997; Late Edition (East Coast); pg. A.11
- Mayor held for Indian killings Slaughter in Mexico; PHIL GUNSON IN MEXICO CITY AP IN LOS
CHORROS; The Guardian, Manchester (UK); Dec 29, 1997; pg. 012
- Indigenous Revolts in Chiapas and the Adean Highlands; Murdo J Macleod; The Hispanic
American Historical Review, Durham; Nov 1997; Vol. 77, Iss. 4; pg. 760, 2 pgs