Dokument #1258614
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Autor)
Information on the treatment of FZLN
supporters by authorities outside Chiapas could not be found among
the sources consulted by the Research Directorate.
For information on the Zapatista National
Liberation Front (FZLN and its relationship with the Zapatista
National Liberation Army (EZLN), please consult the DIRB's May 1997
Q&A Paper Mexico: Armed Insurgent Groups (see section
3.3) and Responses to Information Requests MEX25924.E of 29 January
1997 and MEX24732.E of 16 August 1996. Armed Insurgent
Groups cites various sources which state that the FZLN was
initially described as "an alliance of social organizations that
promote legal and political reform" and in August 1996 it
reportedly counted with more than 400 FZLN committees organized
throughout Mexico.
In addition to the information provided in
those documents, the Internet Websites of the FZLN provide
information on the organization and an indication of its close
relationship with the EZLN, as it publishes EZLN communiqués
and other documents that speak for or on behalf of the latter (see
references listed below for Internet addresses).
The FZLN was formally launched in Mexico
City on 16 September 1997 with the participation of EZLN Civilian
Committee militants from throughout Mexico (Le Monde 18
Sept. 1997). In a communiqué, the EZLN leader declared that
the FZLN signalled a transformation of his movement to a political,
civilian and peaceful organization; however, under existing
conditions, the EZLN army would necessarily continue to exist as a
separate entity (ibid.).
The head of the FZLN, Javier Elorriaga,
stated at the launching that the Front would be autonomous and
should not be considered as the political arm of the EZLN despite
the fact that Elorriaga himself had been an EZLN leader, the idea
of creating the Front resulted from a January 1996 initiative from
the guerrilla leadership, and the principle manifesto of the FZLN
is a close reflection of the EZLN manifesto of principles (ibid.).
The Front declared that it was distancing itself from political
parties and had no interest in running for office; its purported
goal is to mobilize the less favoured people and influence
political power (ibid.).
The FZLN's "founding congress" in
mid-September 1997 included 14 workshops attended by some 400
persons (ibid.). The Ministry of the Interior and the government
reportedly welcomed the formation of the FZLN a sign of movement
towards peace by the Zapatista (ibid.).
The FZLN has been described both as "an
organization comprised of groups and individuals that support the
EZLN" (IPS 16 Apr. 1998) and a political group created to
disseminate the ideas of the guerrillas (AFP 15 Sept. 1997). One
source summarised the FZLN immediately before its official
launching as follows (Mexico & NAFTA Report 16
September 1997):
The FZLN will be run by Javier Elorriaga. ... Elorriaga was in prison from February 1995 to July 1996, accused of being a Zapatista leader.
Elorriaga stressed that the FZLN was another attempt by the Zapatistas to achieve their goals by peaceful rather than military means. He would not be drawn on the question of whether this was the Zapatistas final effort at achieving their goals by peaceful means. It has previously launched the Convencion de Liberacion Nacional Democratica (August 1994) and the Movimiento de Liberacion Nacional (in 1995), both of which achieved little.
The Zapatista leader, subcommandante Marcos, articulate and dramatic though his leadership has been, appears to hanker after military glory. Even Fidel Castro, hardly an armchair revolutionary, has noted that Marcos talks a lot about war and death.
Even Elorriaga argued that the drama of the Zapatista uprising on 1 January 1994 was needed to start the reform process off. He said that before the uprising, the country's democracy was ossified and unreal. He stressed though the FZLN was independent of the EZLN. He said that the FZLN was not the political wing of the EZLN because if that was so the Zapatistas would be conceding that the armed struggle had a place in Mexico's political life. This was not so now.
According to Elorriaga, the Frente's contribution to the democratic debate in Mexico would be to campaign for true democracy and justice but not seek power for itself. He said that it would not compete in elections, nor make alliances with other parties.
For information on recent events involving
authorities and Zapatista supporters in Chiapas, please consult
media reports on Mexico available at your Regional Documentation
Centre.
This Response was prepared after
researching publicly accessible information currently available to
the Research Directorate within time constraints. This Response is
not, and does not purport to be, conclusive as to the merit of any
particular claim to refugee status or asylum. Please find below the
list of additional sources consulted in researching this
Information Request.
References
Agence France Presse (AFP). 15 September
1997. André Birukoff. "Le gouvernement et la guérilla
haussent le ton." (NEXIS)
Inter Press Service (IPS). 16 April
1998. Diego Cevallos. Guerrillas on Alert and Tension on the Rise
in Chiapas." (NEXIS)
Latin American Regional Reports:
Mexico & NAFTA Report [London]. 16 September 1997.
"Another Stunt and Another Attempt at Politics."
Le Monde [Paris]. 18 September
1997. "Les zapatistes refusent de se transformer en parti
politique." (NEXIS)
Additional Sources Consulted
Latinamerica Press [Lima].
1997-98.
Mexico NewsPak [Austin, Tex.].
1997-98.
Newspapers and periodicals pertaining to
the appropriate region.
Electronic sources: IRB databases,
Global NewsBank, NEXIS, Internet, Refworld, WNC.
Note:
This list is not exhaustive. Country and
subject--specific books available in the Resource Centre are not
included.