OAXACA, Mexico, Oct. 31, 2006

Mexican Police Raid Fails To Calm Oaxaca

Protesters Still Defiant After Raid, Tension High As Confrontations Persist

  • Play CBS Video Video Mexican Forces Storm Oaxaca

    CBS News RAW: Mexican federal police stormed the southern city of Oaxaca, taking control of the city back from a group of demonstrators after several people were killed.

    • A line of Mexican federal police hold a position near the main plaza of Oaxaca, Mexico on Monday Oct. 30, 2006.

      A line of Mexican federal police hold a position near the main plaza of Oaxaca, Mexico on Monday Oct. 30, 2006.  (AP Photo)

    • Members of the Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca watch as a vehicle burns in Oaxaca City Monday, Oct. 30, 2006, in Mexico.

      Members of the Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca watch as a vehicle burns in Oaxaca City Monday, Oct. 30, 2006, in Mexico.  (AP Photo)

    • Oaxaca State governor Ulises Ruiz listen to questions during a news conference on Monday Oct. 30, 2006, Mexico.

      Oaxaca State governor Ulises Ruiz listen to questions during a news conference on Monday Oct. 30, 2006, Mexico.  (AP Photo)

    • Mexican federal police, armed with water cannons push back protesters as they advance into the city of Oaxaca, Mexico on Sunday Oct. 29, 2006.

      Mexican federal police, armed with water cannons push back protesters as they advance into the city of Oaxaca, Mexico on Sunday Oct. 29, 2006.  (AP Photo)

    • Supporters of the Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca stand by the body of a protester killed during a clash at a barricade in Oaxaca, Mexico on Sunday Oct. 29, 2006.

      Supporters of the Popular Assembly of the People of Oaxaca stand by the body of a protester killed during a clash at a barricade in Oaxaca, Mexico on Sunday Oct. 29, 2006.  (AP Photo)

    Previous slide Next slide
  • Photo Essay Mexican Standoff

    Contentious presidential election winding down, but a challenge of the results has been promised.

  • Interactive Mexico Votes

    Mexicans cast ballots to choose a new president, ending a contentious campaign but prompting a challenge of the results.

  • Photo Essay Mexico Bus Tragedy

    Dozens are killed when overcrowded bus returning from religious festival plunges into a ravine.

(CBS/AP)  Violence threatened to return to the streets of Mexico’s southern city of Oaxaca Monday, one day after federal police stormed the town and wrested control from striking teachers and leftists who seized the city center five months earlier.

Oaxaca's bitter conflict has spread beyond the burned wreckage left by months of protests and the police offensive, with Mexico's Congress now urging the state's governor to resign and leftist leaders calling for the nation to rally behind the movement.

Bands of youths roamed the cobblestone streets of the colonial city on Monday, tossing gasoline bombs, hijacking vehicles and vowing to fight on amid violence that has divided people here and across Mexico. Burned-out shells of vehicles dotted the streets.

The U.S. Embassy released a statement advising Americans against all travel to one of Mexico's top tourist destinations “due to this increase in violence.”

The Mexican Congress passed a nonbinding resolution asking Oaxaca Gov. Ulises Ruiz to resign — the protesters' main demand — while Zapatista rebel leader Subcomandante Marcos and former leftist presidential candidate Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador called for demonstrations in other Mexican cities to support the protesters.

The protests began in May as a teachers' strike but quickly spiraled into chaos as anarchists, students and Indian groups seized the central plaza and barricaded streets throughout the city to demand Ruiz's ouster.

President Vicente Fox, who had resisted repeated calls to send federal forces to Oaxaca, did so on Saturday setting off street battles.

Ruiz, who protesters accuse of rigging 2004 elections and oppressing dissent, has refused to step down and accused “radical groups” from Mexico City of fueling the street battles.

Protesters, meanwhile, peacefully occupied a new city plaza where they planned to set up their new base, about five blocks from Oaxaca's main square, which they were driven out of on Sunday in a raid by about 3,500 federal riot police.

Ruiz returned to offices he had been forced out of months ago by the protesters. But police control of the city remained only partial at best; new barricades sprung up on the road to his offices in a matter of hours after police had cleared the way.

Armored trucks with water cannons posted at the edges of the main plaza fired jets of water to extinguish blazes set by the protesters. Officers fired occasional rounds of tear gas in answer to the gasoline bombs and powerful fireworks that protesters launched at police lines.

Strike-weary residents saw their hopes for a return to normality dashed once again; schools in the city remained closed on Monday, despite a promise by teachers — whose strike for higher wages ignited the battle — to return to work. A scattering of businesses, including some stalls in the city's famous marketplace, reopened Monday, but there was little business.

Thousands of leftists and teachers marched through the city on Monday chanting, “Fight, fight, fight! Don't stop fighting!” before confronting police guarding the main plaza.

About 2,000 protesters regrouped in a plaza just a few blocks from the Zocalo, saying they would establish that as their main base until they could retake the main plaza.

Ignoring protesters who screamed “Sellout!” a group of about 20 residents and business owners waged earlier countermarches to thank federal police for clearing away the demonstrators, who had kept the city under siege since May, shutting down businesses and repelling the scores of national and international tourists who traditionally are drawn to the colonial city of 275,000.

“Let them stay,” Edith Mendoza, a 40-year-old housewife, said of the police. “We were held hostage for five months.”

Federal officials said the police would stay here as long as needed to restore order, but there did not appear to be enough of them to do the job.

Eight people have died in clashes since protesters took over the city in late May. Protesters claim that police and state forces — often in plainclothes — have shot at protesters, setting off the violence. Among those killed was U.S. activist-journalist Bradley Roland Will, 36, of New York. Protesters say local police shot him.


©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment
by blahblahbla5 November 1, 2006 7:06 PM EST
dear cbs news (and ap) please correct the last part of this otherwise accurate story:

"Protesters claim that police and state forces %u2014 often in plainclothes %u2014 have shot at protesters, setting off the violence. Among those killed was U.S. activist-journalist Bradley Roland Will, 36, of New York. Protesters say local police shot him."

this is neither a "claim" nor does it come from protesters exlusively.

"At a news conference oct 29th, Oaxaca%u2019s mayor Manuel Martmnez told reporters that four public officials, including two policemen, and a former official had been detained in connection with Will%u2019s killing. According to the Mexican press, photographs and video footage of the incident helped local authorities identify the suspects".

see for yourself:
http://www.cpj.org/protests/06ltrs/americas/mexico30oct06pl.html

please check your facts.
Reply to this comment

Exclusive Webshow

Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie." Watch Now

Latest News
News in Pictures
Scroll Left Scroll Right
  • Day in Pictures Day in Pictures

    A Glimpse at the Day's News as Seen Through a Camera Lens

  • Fort Hood's Fallen Heroes Fort Hood's Fallen Heroes

    A Look at Those Who Lost Their Lives in the Fort Hood Massacre

  • Veterans Day 2009 Veterans Day 2009

    Respects are Paid to Soldiers Around the Country and Abroad

  • BMI Country Awards BMI Country Awards

    Country's Finest Walk the Red Carpet for the 57th BMI Country Music Awards

  • Day in Pictures Day in Pictures

    A Glimpse at the Day's News as Seen Through a Camera Lens

  • Celebrity Circuit Celebrity Circuit

    James Woods in Court, Michelle Obama on "Sesame Street"; Plus, Premieres for "The Road" and "A Single Man"

Connect with CBS News

Stay connected with the CBS News using your favorite social networks and online news applications: