0

Shows > VICE News

The New Zapatistas?

VICE News

Back in September, as the Mexican presidential elections were still in full swing, we headed to Cherán, an indigenous rebel town located in the southwestern state of Michoacán, Mexico, to celebrate the first anniversary of their fight against organized crime and the protection of the nearby forests.

For several years, Cherán’s forests were illegally deforested by loggers protected by the notorious La Familia cartel. Locals asked the government for protection but were ignored. So on April 15, 2011, the townspeople took matters into their own hands. Armed with sticks, stones and machetes, the people of Cherán seized the local government and police buildings and set up burning barricades around the perimeter of the town.

By appealing to various national and international laws, they achieved indigenous autonomy and were granted the right to establish their own form of government.

The deposed municipal president and his cabinet were expelled from town. Cherán is now governed by a council of 12 elders and protected by a volunteer militia that utilizes expropriated weapons and vehicles. Today, one year after the uprising, they still maintain barricades at all four entrances into town.

The townspeople have banned all political propaganda within the town and refused to participate in the presidential elections that were held this past July. As one of the members of the council said, “If the government had the least bit of dignity, they wouldn’t even dare to talk about elections when our own security here has been in jeopardy. That is why we will have no more political parties in Cherán.”

Comments

More From This Show

  • White Student Union - Trailer

    We recently went to Towson University to speak with Matthew Heimbach, the founder of a group that advocates for “persons of European heritage." We also met the students who want him off campus... or a…

  • Sisa: Cocaine of the Poor

    A new drug called sisa is tearing its way through Athens' poor. The ingredients are basically meth and filler things like battery acid, engine oil, shampoo, and cooking salt. It acts faster and the ef…

  • Triple Hate - Trailer

    'Triple Hate' is a documentary about Nathan Bedford Forrest, the Memphis City Council, the Klan, the Crips, Ulysses S. Grant, racism, and the specter of history. Part one premieres Monday, May 20, on

  • This Is What Winning Looks Like

    Filmmaker and author Ben Anderson went to Afghanistan in 2007 and stayed for six years. 'This Is What Winning Looks Like' is his disturbing documentary about the ineptitude, drug abuse, sexual miscond…

  • This Is What Winning Looks Like - Trailer

    Filmmaker and author Ben Anderson went to Afghanistan in 2007 and stayed for six years. 'This Is What Winning Looks Like' is his disturbing new documentary about the ineptitude, drug abuse, sexual mis…

  • Bomb Blast Bajaur

    On April 20, a female suicide bomber attacked a hospital in Khar, one of the largest towns in Pakistan's Bajaur region. Four people were killed. When we visited Bajaur six months earlier, the army had…

  • BC Bud

    With a reported value of over six billion dollars, it’s no secret that pot in British Columbia is big business. However, due to the recent legalization of weed in Washington and Colorado, the draconia…

  • BC Bud - Trailer

    With a reported value of over six billion dollars, it’s no secret that marijuana in British Columbia is big business. However, due to the recent legalization of weed in Washington and Colorado, the dr…

  • Protesting Thatcher's Funeral

    On the morning of Wednesday April 17, 2013, the Iron Lady was laid to rest. Anti-Thatcher protesters planned on congregating at Ludgate Circus so they could turn their backs on the coffin as it went p…

  • Margaret Thatcher's Death Party

    On Saturday, thousands of people showed up in Trafalgar Square in London to celebrate the death of Margaret Thatcher. Our colleagues from VICE UK went along to witness this morbid and very British par…