The Mesoamerican Isthmus:
Globalization, Ecology and Security
23/02/2001
- Opinión
The new Mexican government recently announced its project "Puebla-
Panama," directed toward the development of the country's southern
area and reaching toward Central America. Meanwhile, on February 15th,
the Guatemalan Congress authorized the creation of the "New Horizons"
exercise between the armies of the United States and Guatemala, of a
"humanitarian" nature, in the El Petén zone bordering Chiapas. More
over, the Mexican portion of the isthmus has just integrated an
ecological program that the World Bank manages in Central America
known as "The Mesoamerican Biological Corridor."
Three seemingly distinct projects that coincide, not only in their
declared ecological, civic and humanitarian intentions but also for
their particular interest in the zone near the Mexican-Guatemalan
border. These common interests raise questions in terms of intentions
in the realm of economic interests and security.
It is well known that the isthmus that extends from the South of
Mexico toward Panama contains areas of exceptional biodiversity. The
zone covering Southern Mexico and Northern Guatemala is particularly
rich in natural resources (forests, sources of water and petroleum,
among others).
New Horizons
The plan New Horizons 2001, which was finally approved in the
Guatemalan Congress after encountering resistance, will organize joint
task-force "exercises" with the U.S. and the Guatemalan armies.
According to a document released by the U.S. embassy in Guatemala:
"New Horizons is strictly a training and humanitarian support mission.
It is not an anti-narcotics operation." The majority of U.S. troops
will be army reserves or members of the National Guard, who will be
spending two-week periods in Guatemala. The construction of schools
and wells, road-improvement and medical assistance has been announced.
A similar program took place in El Salvador last year, with the
participation of Guatemalan troops.
César Montes, secretary of the Unity of the Democratic Left, who
describes the agreement as "the historical shame of the new
millenium," has denounced on his part, with the support of
declarations made by the Chief of the Southen Command of the American
army, the arrival of up to 12 thousand troops in Guatemala, "which is
technically an invasion." Likewise, he recalls that during the brief
presidency of General Efraín Ríos Montt, the current President of
Parliament, "there were 200 thousand deaths, 400 destroyed villages, a
million exiled, and, of the 400 destroyed villages, 399 were Maya and
one was mestizo." El Petén is an area of Mayan population.
Puebla-Panama
The Puebla-Panama project, designed by the Mexican government as a
broad-reaching program "to assure that the fruits of globalization
find their way to all corners of Mexico," has as its goal the
"promotion of structural change in the Southern and Southeastern
states in the longer-term." The project, which covers the states of
Chiapas, Oaxaca, Guerrero, Quintana Roo, Yucatán, Campeche, Tabasco y
Veracruz, will incorporate: "the instrumentation of strategic projects
and changes that permit the flowering of regional diversity and
richness and overcome the enormous backwardness and inequality that so
damage our country and that are incompatible with the process of
democratic consolidation." In consideration are road-works and
hydroelectric infrastructure, as well as improvements of railroad
tracks and ports, among others.
Mexico's richest biodiversity happens to be concentrated in this zone,
where more than 90% of the petroleum is extracted, and the greater
part of the country's capacity for electrical generation is found.
According to official sources: "This program falls within the
framework of another program of greater magnitude, whose objective is
to eliminate obstacles that have blocked the area's productive
potential, and also to promote its development and aid its integration
into national and international markets, not only with North America
but also with Central America."
As it seems, one of these obstacles would be indigenous communities,
in the case of the Montes Azules biosphere reserve - bordering on the
Guatemalan portion of El Petén -- whose eviction is seen as a
necessary part of the plan, and which, according to the advisor of the
National Security Adviser, Adolfo Aguilar Zinser, "must be one theme
of the dialogue and peace in Chiapas." The official commented before
military and civilian specialists in National Security that the
communities that will have to leave the reserve have already been
identified, signaling that the presence of the Mexican army is
strategic, because this is the country's last reserve and "if in ten
years it has been stripped of its resources all the basins in the
state of Chiapas will be dislocated." With such ecological arguments,
Aguilar attempts to incorporate the country's natural resources into
the scope of his authority, according to sources from La Journada.
The Mesoamerican Biological Corridor
The Mesoamerican Biological Corridor's goal is to "integrate policies
of conservation through the establishment of biological connectors
between the protected areas of Southeast Mexico, in order to avoid
their biological isolation and to guarantee the equilibrium of
terrestrial and marine ecosystems, under a philosophy of sustainable
development," affirms the World Bank.
This is an ecological project already taking place in Central American
countries, including Panama, of seven years duration, for which the
Bank has just approved a budget of 19.1 million for the project's
incorporation in Mexico. It deals with the same region of the country
as plan "Puebla-Panamá (with the exception of the state of Guerrero).
The project looks to promote "innovative" forms of managing the
region's biodiversity, including exploitation, for economic ends, of
the zone's vast natural resources. It will try to "maintain or
reestablish a functional continuity between the ecosystems of
Southeast Mexico and those of Guatemala and Belize, thereby
integrating the northern portion of the Mesoamerican Biological
Corridor," in order to, among other things, maintain species'
migratory routes.
The World Bank also stated that "the area covered by the Corridor,
which extends from Mexico to Panama, is home to many indigenous
communities as well as abundant and uncommon plant and animal life."
Although it represents only 0.5% of the earth's surface, it is
estimated that this area contains 7% of the planet's known
biodiversity. The program "uses environmental conservation as a
catalyst in order to reduce poverty and improve quality of life, to
incite regional cooperation, to conserve the region's rich cultural
heritage and to promote a new image of Central America on an
international level," according to the Bank.
Coincidences
Juan Antonio Zúñiga, in the newspaper La Journada (2-18-2002),
comments in respect to these three programs that: "The interest of the
U.S. Armed Forces and the World Bank seem to coincide with the
proposition of President Vincente Fox's administration of bringing
globalization into the region of Southeastern Mexico, using arguments
among which also figure ecological elements." Furthermore, Zúñiga
points out that Fox is counting on "the participation of at least one
of the richest men in Mexico who is already part of the advice of the
Pemex administration: Arturo Romo."
He also notes another "coincidence": "The Guatemalan region of El
Petén is in communication, via the Lacantún river, with the area known
as Las Cañadas, in the Lacandona forest, where the EZLN (zapatista
army) has a good portion of its support bases."
In effect, the Guatemalan-Mexican border is not only an area rich in
natural resources but also inhabited by indigenous populations who
have suffered centuries of abandonment and repression by the central
powers. In recent decades it has been the scene of internal
conflicts. One of the central questions raised, then, in respect to
these projects, is whether they will be carried out in consultation
with these populations, or if these peoples will only be taken into
account as a security risk.
(*) Translator's note: quotations are free translations from the
Spanish version of the documents.
https://www.alainet.org/es/node/105088?language=en