Gran Lucha | |||||
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Part of War of National Liberation | |||||
Subcomandante Marcos along with a Zapatista unit mobilizing in Chiapas, Mexico. | |||||
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Belligerents | |||||
Zapatista National Liberation Army (EZLN) | Armed Forces of Mexico | ||||
Commanders | |||||
Comandante Hugo† |
Miguel Ángel Godínez Bravo | ||||
Strength | |||||
3,000 | 1,780 troops 560 police | ||||
Casualties and losses | |||||
1,985 | 56 troops 141 police |
The Gran Lucha (English: Great Struggle) is considered the beginning of the War of National Liberation.
On the morning of January 1 1994, an estimated 3,000 armed Zapatista insurgents seized towns and cities in Chiapas, including Ocosingo, Las Margaritas, Huixtan, Oxchuc, Rancho Nuevo, Altamirano, and Chanal. They freed the prisoners in the jail of San Cristóbal de las Casas, and set fire to several police buildings and military barracks in the area. The guerrillas enjoyed brief success, but the next day Mexican army forces counter-attacked and fierce fighting broke out in and around the market of Ocosingo. The Zapatista forces took heavy casualties, and retreated from the city into the surrounding jungle.
Armed clashes in Chiapas ended on January 12, 1994, with a ceasefire brokered by the Catholic diocese in San Cristóbal de las Casas under Bishop Samuel Ruiz, a well known liberation theologian. Some of the land taken over by the Zapatistas in 1994 was retained, but the territory they held militarily for a little more than a year was overrun by the Mexican army in a surprise ceasefire breach in February 1995. The Zapatista villages were mostly abandoned following the offensive, and the rebels fled into the mountains after breaking out of the Mexican army perimeter.