Congreso Nacional Indígena
On May 26, 27 and 28, 2017, the Constituent Assembly of the Indigenous Council of Government for Mexico will be held at the facilities of the Indigenous Center for Integral Training (CIDECI-UNITIERRA) in the city of San Cristobal de las Casas, Chiapas, which was the decision of the 5th CNI in December 2016 to January 2017.
- Logo of cni
Origin
The first Nacional Indigenous Congress took place 1996 in Mexico City[1] and was the first nationwide indigenous congress ever in Mexico. Before there has been indegenous congresses in single states like in San Cristóbal de las Casas, Chiapas in 1974.[2] The appearance of the CNI is connected to the fail of the state Mexico to implement the Agreements of San Andrés and the call of the Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN - Ejército Zapatista de Liberación Nacional) to participate on a nationwide forum to find a common answer to questions of human rights and indigenous culture.
Political turn
Today, between the parts of the 5th CNI, it is decided, that the CNI will try to send an independent candidate, to run for the presidency, in the shape of an indigenous woman.[3] The goal of the Organisation is not only fixed to the election campaign, it also aims to increase the level of well-organized communities, tribes and individuals in a nationwide process, because only organisation seems to be a worth response on the problems which those communities faces. Furthermore due getting organized the CNI expect a rise of awareness for the issues of displacement, poorness and invisibility, which not only indigenous people suffer in Mexico.[4]
Translation of the Spanish wiki page
See on: Spanish CNI Wikipedia article
1st CNI (1996)
Complete declaration (in Spanish) see: I Congreso Nacional Indígena
After the decision to create the CNI in January 1996, the first National Indigenous Congress in Mexico City was convened from 8 to 12 October of the same year. The EZLN receives an invitation from the organizers of the event and, despite the conflictive climate generated by the Mexican State since 1994, the Comandata Ramona comes as the representative being the first Zapatista to break the borders of Chiapas arriving at the capital of the republic. From the Zocalo, she announced the Zapatistas' words: "I am the first of many steps of the Zapatistas to the Federal District and all the places of Mexico." In this same statement, Ramona speaks for the first time the phrase that until today is used as a symbol of CNI: "Never again a Mexico without us!"[5]
The final declaration of the congress expressed the main agreements in a resolution document containing demands and proposals. As demands were demanded briefly "... the recognition of all our social, political and cultural rights for the affirmation, flourishing and lasting of our communities and peoples. (...) the immediate and complete fulfillment of the Agreements of the Table 1 on Indigenous Rights and Culture of the San Andrés Dialogue, (...) the demilitarization of the indigenous areas of the country. " As proposals were briefly outlined "Move towards a new Constitution that, with the effective participation of everyone, will include an inclusive and plural project ... [and] ... intensify the struggle for the satisfaction of our pending demands."[5]
2nd CNI (1998)
Complete declaration (in Spanish) see: II Congreso Nacional Indígena
The II National Indigenous Congress was held from 9 to 11 October 1998 in the Zócalo of Mexico City with the participation of 525 delegates, 102 organizations, 20 states of the Republic, as well as representatives from Ecuador, Bolivia , Chile, Argentina, Peru, Panama, Guatemala and El Salvador.[6]
During the four days they were treated, in seven work tables; The integral reconstitution of indigenous peoples within the framework of the struggle for self-determination and autonomy framed in the National Consultation for the Recognition of Indigenous Rights and the End of the War of Extermination; The renewal and strengthening of the National Indigenous Congress; And the joint struggle of the indigenous peoples of Mexico, the continent and the world. In the final declaration, proclaimed on October 12, they denounced the exclusion and subjugation that they have suffered, as original peoples, for centuries and that has intensified with globalized Neoliberalism. They demonstrated by the fulfillment of the Agreements of San Andrés. They supported and reaffirmed their participation in the National Consultation for the Recognition of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and the End of the War of Extermination that was held on March 21, 1999 simultaneously in various parts of Mexico and the world. They called on peoples and civil society to participate in the reconstitution of "this homeland of ours."[7]
3rd CNI (2001)
Complete declaration (in Spanish) see: III Congreso Nacional Indígena
The III National Indigenous Congress was held in the indigenous community of Nurío, Michoacán, from March 2 to 4, 2001. The final declaration of the congress denounced the militarization in the territory, the persecution of different community organizations and the Privatization of natural resources. The constitutional recognition of the Rights of Indian Peoples was emphasized, following the constitutional reform initiative elaborated by the Concord and Pacification Commission, based on the San Andrés Accords. They pronounced for the constitutional recognition of their full existence as peoples, their self-determination, their territories and their normative systems. They expressed their support for the March for Indigenous Dignity, which led a Zapatista delegation to Mexico City to speak to the Congress of the Union. On March 28, 2001, four indigenous commanders visited the Legislative Palace of San Lázaro and from the main tribune spoke to deputies and senators to claim their struggle and demand the approval of the indigenous rights law reforms raised in the Agreements of San Andrés Larraínzar.
Speech by Comandanta Esther in the Legislative Palace of San Lazaro, March 28, 2001.
"So here I am, an indigenous woman, in this gallery that is a symbol. And it's also a symbol that it's me, a poor, indigenous and Zapatista woman, who first takes the stage to declaim the central message of our word as zapatistas. When indigenous rights and culture are constitutionally recognized, it will begin to unite its time in the time of the Indian peoples. And if today we are indigenous, then we will be all the others and others who are killed, persecuted and imprisoned because of their difference. "
Words pronounced by Subcomandante Marcos, March 11, 2001, at the arrival of the March of the Color of the Earth (March for the Indigenous Dignity) to the Zócalo of Mexico City.
"One thing only speaks our word, one thing only looks at our gaze, the constitutional recognition of indigenous rights and culture, a place worthy for the color of the earth, it is time for this country to stop being a shame. It is the hour of the Indian people, of the color of the earth, of all the colors that we are below and what colors we are, despite the color of money, we are rebels because the earth is rebellious if there is someone who sells and buys as if the earth were not, and as if there were no color that we are of the earth. "
4th CNI (2006)
Complete declaration (in Spanish) see: IV Congreso Nacional Indígena
In June 2005 the EZLN launched a new proposal through the Sixth Declaration of the Lacandon Jungle calling on the peoples of Mexico and the world to organize around a program of struggle to resist and create "a world [...] so large that all those worlds will fit."[8] As part of this initiative and in the context of the ongoing election, the Other Campaign began on January 1, 2006, which was consisted as the tour of Delegate Zero (Subcomandante Marcos) through the 31 States of the Mexican Republic and The Federal District with the aim of listening to the Mexican people. While the campaigns of the established parties just promised, the EZLN through Delegate Zero listened and did not preach. On May 5 and 6, 2006, on the peak of The Other Campaign, the National Indigenous Congress held its fourth national meeting in the community of N'donhuani-San Pedro Atlapulco, State of Mexico. Almost 10 years after its founding, the CNI reconvenes and decides to support the Other Campaign. In addition, this congress ratified the total repudiation of the attacks of the State on the residents of San Salvador Atenco, as well as the proposals to strengthen the mechanisms of communication and solidarity of the CNI. Finally, a call is made to "all indigenous peoples, communities and organizations and all oppressed sectors to form a broad anti-capitalist front that promotes a process leading to a New Constitution and another form of government that allows the recognition of our rights and A fair, free and democratic society."[9]
5th CNI (2016)
That retains in its centers the Earth
Complete declaration (in Spanish) see: V Congreso Nacional Indígena
From the IV CNI, 10 years passed without a national meeting until 2016 when, in the context of the celebration of the 20th anniversary of the CNI, the V National Indigenous Congress was convened from 9 to 14 October at the premises of the Indigenous Training Center Integral (CIDECI- UNITIERRA) in the city of San Cristóbal de las Casas, Chiapas. This was the first National Indigenous Congress held in Zapatista territory where the celebration for the 20th anniversary was held in the Oventik Caracol on 12 October.
It is urgent that we bring our flames of resistance, autonomy, and rebellion together. These flames illuminate every originary people who weave new worlds that are truly from below, where love and the ancestral commitment to our mother—the earth—are born."[10]
The main topics for discussion at this congress were: Loot and repression; Our resistance and rebellion; Balance of the CNI and Proposals for the strengthening of the CNI. As a proposal for the first stage of the Fifth National Indigenous Congress they declared themselves in permanent assembly to consult in each of the "geographies, territories and courses the agreement ... to appoint an" Indigenous Council of Government "whose word is materialized by a woman Indigenous, delegate of the CNI as an independent candidate to fight on behalf of the National Indigenous Congress and the Zapatista Army of National Liberation in the electoral process of 2018 for the presidency of this country."[11]
Agree to meet again, after 3 months of community consultation in each of the towns and communities that make up the CNI, for the second stage on December 29, 30 and 31, 2016 in San Cristóbal and on January 1, 2017 in The Caracol of Oventik.
And it shook!
Complete declaration (in Spanish) see: V Congreso Nacional Indígena
During the second stage of the V CNI, the information collected during the consultation was shared with the participation of 523 communities, 25 states of the country and 43 indigenous peoples. In the resolution "And the earth trembled! A Report from the Epicenter ... communicated on January 1, 2017 in Oventik, it was announced that by agreement it was approved to appoint the"' Indigenous Council of Government "that intends to govern the country, with a woman Indigenous of the CNI as spokesperson and independent candidate to the presidency of Mexico in the elections of the year 2018."[3]
This 'Indigenous Council of Government' is guided by the seven principles of Mandar-Obeying:
- Obey and not to govern
- Represent and not supplant
- Serve and not serve oneself
- Convince and not win
- From below and not from above
- Propose and not impose
- Build and not Destroy
On May 26, 27 and 28, 2017, the Constituent Assembly of the Indigenous Council of Government for Mexico will be held at the facilities of the Indigenous Center for Integral Training (CIDECI-UNITIERRA) in the city of San Cristobal de las Casas, Chiapas.[4]
References
- ↑ ¿Qué es el CNI?
- ↑ El congreso indigena de 1974 buscando nuestras raices, March 2016
- 1 2 And the earth trembled! A report from the epicenter, January 2017
- 1 2 Convocation to the constitutive assembly of the indigenous governing council for mexico, April 2017
- 1 2 "¡Nunca más un México sin Nosotros!", October 1996
- ↑ Juan Anzaldo Meneses, "Por la Reconstitución Integral de los Pueblos Indígenas" , October 1998
- ↑ II Congreso Nacional Indígena “Declaración de Tenochtitlán”, October 1998
- ↑ Sixt Declaration of the selva Lacandona, June 2005
- ↑ IV Congreso Nacional Indígena, June 2005
- ↑ The cni and ezln announce the fifth national indigenous congress, August 2016
- ↑ May the earth tremble at it's core, October 2016