Beginning June 13, 2016, the Mixtec population blocks the way of federal forces arriving in Oaxaca to impose the Education Reform. On the morning of June 19, 2016, the blockade located by the town of Nochixtlán is removed. The majority of the inhabitants don't know that the site where the attack began, and the places where the violence of the operation ordered by the state government of Gabino Cué Monteagudo and the federal government of Enrique Peña Nieto would later spread, lie on top of or are a few kilometers away from different mineral deposits.
Once again, after a brief period of indifference, the eyes of the entire planet turned towards the southern state of Oaxaca; the roar of dozens of pistols and high-caliber weapons fired by police against the Mixtec population caught the world’s attention.
Three fireworks are fired from under the La Comisión Bridge – located at kilometer 178 on highway 190, which connects the city of Oaxaca with Mexico City – they pass several meters over it and go off. Their thunder is the alert signal people have been awaiting for six consecutive nights, confirming that government forces are approaching Santa María Asunción Nochixtlán, Oaxaca.
Around 7:30 in the morning on Sunday, June 19, 2016, combined troops from the Federal Police, National Gendarmerie, Transit Police, and State Police begin the attack on the population. In a few short minutes the air is saturated with tear gas. Just one hour after the offensive begins, the sound of gunfire echoes throughout the area.
The blood of hundreds of Mixtecs is spilled by police gunfire in Nochixtlán. The repression spreads to San Francisco Telixtlahuaca, San Pedro Huitzo, Hacienda Blanca and Viguera. Without knowing it, this blood falls over deposits of manganese, lead, copper, zinc, molybdenum, antimony, coal, iron, graphite, gold, and silver.
The mining allocation extends to less than three kilometers from where the governmental assault began, very close to a junction that connects to one of the entrances to Nochixtlán. It is there that the Federal Police barracks is located, which was burned by an enraged population during the repression on June 19.
In addition to being territory under exploration for mineral extraction by SGM, Asunción Nochixtlán is also where title 158333, granted to the company CIA Minera Parral y Anexas, SA de CV is located. The mining claim is called “El conjunto cinco” and is currently canceled. This mining concession encompasses 50 hectares for the exploitation of manganese within the municipality’s territory.
The municipalities bordering Nochixtlán also have mining concessions. Two such titles appear in the Mining Administration System registered under the name of Asunción Nochixtlán:
COMPANY | TITLE | MINERAL | HECTARES | CLAIM |
---|---|---|---|---|
Jaime Cruz Cortez y Socios | 239954 | Titanium | 209.903 | Los compadres 1 |
Jaime Cruz Cortez y Socios | 239955 | Titanium | 118.595 | Los compadres 2 |
COMPANY | TITLE | MINERAL | HECTARES | CLAIM |
---|---|---|---|---|
Lucio Sánchez Silva | 216817 | Gold, Silver, Palladium, Platinum | 65 | San Pedro |
Lucio Sánchez Silva | 216818 | Gold, Silver, Palladium, Platinum | 0.14 | San Pedro Fracción I |
Big North Graphite | 223177 | Gold, Silver, Lead, Copper, Zinc and Graphite | 500 | El Tejón |
Mittal Steel Molinos S.A. DE C.V | 229853 | Iron | 13, 160 | MS-Oaxaca IV |
Endeavour Silver Corp o Minera del Cubo S.A. DE C.V. | 165665 | Gold, Silver, Copper | 20 | La Cucharita |
Miguel Ángel Quiñones Romero | 223931 | Potassium/Trisodium phosphate | 15 | El Dorado |
Servicios Minero Metalurgicos de Occidente | 228476 | Iron | 500 | La Araña II |
The morning and midday hours pass by tensely in the City of Resistance. Not in 2006, nor ten years later, is the majority of the population aware that 6 kilometers from the intersections of Hacienda Blanca and Viguera lies a mining concession, which under title number 229875 grants 7,200 hectares to the company Mittal Steel Molinos for iron exploitation. The title is registered in the town of Santa Tomas Mazaltepec and also encompasses the towns of San Felipe Tejalapam, San Andrés Zautla, Nazareno Etla, Soledad Etla and San Lorenzo Cacaotepec.
The young man Azael Galán Mendoza is killed six kilometers from the border of this mining concession by a bullet fired by a state police officer. While the sun is setting, the repression continues at the Viguera intersection.
Industrial Minera México is also in the list of companies that have concessions in the Mixteca region. It seeks to extract iron, molybdenum, manganese and antimony from the lands where Silvano Sosa Chávez was born, one of the people killed in Nochixtlán who had arrived to support his Mixtec brothers. He was from San Pedro Ñumi, where Industrial Minera México has been granted title 227428, an allocation of 6,172 hectares that make up the claim the company has called "Mixteca 1."
Amidst the state repression against the teachers and Mixtec communities who rejected the Educational Reform, radio broadcaster Salvador Olmo was murdered on June 26, 2016 in Huajuapan de León in an attack carried out by the municipal police. He was tortured and then mowed down by a police pickup truck. Huajuapan de León is also territory allocated to mining exploration since September 1st and 2nd, 2011, under titles 239, 240, 243 and 244, spanning 19,585 hectares in total.
The names of the owners of these companies are practically unknown. Outside of the media that specialize in aggrandizing their personas and the valiant work that some journalists have taken on to denounce their noxious activity, their presence is almost completely off the radar. They don't even have to worry about setting foot in the territories they seek to appropriate, just like the Spanish kings who never had to cross the sea to steal the gold and silver of what is today known as America.
No account of the terror that existed in Oaxaca on June 19, 2016 is more striking than the drawings and stories of the children of Nochixtlán. Even if the attack limited itself to putting down the teachers’ resistance to the Educational Reform, the significance of launching a disproportionate attack against one of the gateways to the Mixteca region of Oaxaca is much broader.
Leaving a message of repression branded into the skin of the Mixteca through a massacre like that of June 19 is an indispensable requirement for the advance of transnational mining companies over the coveted mineral deposits in the region. Santiago Ayuquililla, Chilixtlahuaca and Huajuapan de León are two more territories allocated for the search of gold and silver, and Santiago Yosondúa is the access point to the largest iron deposit on the planet, to name just a few of the concessions found in Oaxacan territory.