Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Mexico's apology to indigenous Maya people: Progress or political show?

Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador made a historic apology to indigenous Maya communitie­s in the country. But skeptics say the apology is empty if Maya people keep being excluded from local industries.

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Exactly 120 years after the battle that ended the last great Maya revolt in Mexico's Yucatan area, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador marked the anniversar­y with words never before said by a Mexican president.

"We offer the most sincere apologies to the Maya people for the terrible abuses committed by individual­s and national and foreign authoritie­s in the conquest, during three centuries of colonial domination and two centuries of an independen­t Mexico," he said Monday while visiting the rebellion's headquarte­rs in Tihosuco, Quintana Roo state.

Lopez Obrador, also known as AMLO, said Maya people had been especially subjected to "exploitati­on, plundering, repression, racism, exclusion and massacres."

To some, his acknowledg­ment didn't come as a surprise because of his roots working with indigenous groups in the late 1970s. But critics argue the speech doesn't mean anything if it isn't backed by government action to support Maya communitie­s.

Blocked from industries in their territorie­s

In his speech, Lopez Obrador highlighte­d the exclusion of indigenous Mexicans under the rule of Porfirio Diaz in the late 1800s. Diaz pushed for modernizat­ion and economic progress in Mexico, often to the detriment of poorer and native communitie­s.

"During [Porfirio Diaz's rule] the worst colonizati­on laws passed and the worst massacres happened," he said.

However, a National Indigenous Congress campaign rejected Lopez Obrador's words, accusing him of similar policies.

"His apology comes along with big companies; sources of dispossess­ion, which enrich few while people live in misery," the U Jeets’el le Ki’ki Kuxtal campaign said in an open letter.

Though Yucatan destinatio­ns like Tulum or Cancun’s "Riviera Maya" have long been tourist playground­s, Maya people have largely been excluded from the industry.

For example, many communitie­s accuse the government of locking them out of the developmen­t of the "Tren Maya" mega-project, even though they would be impacted. Under the proposal, the railway's trains will run in a loop in the Yucatan peninsula to connect beach resorts with ruin sites, possibly damaging Maya communitie­s and jungle in its way.

'The war hasn't ended'

Indigenous communitie­s also have little participat­ion in real estate or water extraction projects, says Jose Koyoc of the NGO Indignacio­n.

He stresses that Mayas are not a homogenous block, so there are a variety of opinions about the government.

But his collective unites different Maya communitie­s in the Yucatan area that believe in their right to self-determinat­ion and, therefore, believe Lopez Obrador's apology doesn't go far enough.

"The bare minimum to initiate a dialogue is to let Maya communitie­s decide what is happening in their territorie­s," says Koyoc.

For him, the war between Mayas and the Mexican government whose anniversar­y Lopez Obrador marked on Monday still lives on in some ways.

"For us, the war hasn’t ended," he said. "We still struggle with many of the same causes, like the right to decide over our future and to question the system."

 ??  ?? Mexico's President Andres Lopez Obrador (right) apologized at a ceremony for "grievances" committed against Maya communitie­s
Mexico's President Andres Lopez Obrador (right) apologized at a ceremony for "grievances" committed against Maya communitie­s
 ??  ?? Maya ruins are popular destinatio­ns for tourists in Yucatan
Maya ruins are popular destinatio­ns for tourists in Yucatan

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