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Campaign launched to stop violence against Native women   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #2228 of 2440 |
http://www.indianz.com/News/2007/002587.asp

Campaign launched to stop violence against Native women
Wednesday, April 25, 2007
Filed Under: National

Native women advocates on Tuesday hailed the release of an Amnesty International
report as the first step in a long campaign to combat sexual assault in Indian
Country.

"Maze of Injustice: The failure to protect Indigenous women from sexual violence
in the USA" highlights statistics and stories all too familiar to tribal
communities. Native women are victims of violence, including rape, at the
highest rates of any group in the nation, and the crimes against them often go
unreported and unpunished.

"People haven't acknowledged it as a significant problem," said Bonnie
Clairmont, a member of the Ho-Chunk Nation of Wisconsin. "It has become a huge
national disgrace."

Clairmont, who works on victims' advocacy for the Tribal Law and Policy
Institute, spoke a panel discussion in Washington, D.C., last night after the
release of the report. She was joined by Winona Flying Earth, a member of the
Standing Rock Sioux Tribe who advocates for victims in South Dakota.

Both speakers recounted the decades of work by Native women to draw attention to
domestic and sexual violence in Indian Country. They cited successes -- such as
the inclusion of a tribal section in the Violence Against Women Act -- but noted
that the issue isn't on the national, or even international, radar despite the
shocking statistics.

"We're not a political force to be dealt with," said Flying Earth, noting that
American Indians and Alaska Natives make up about 1 percent of the U.S.
population.

With the support of Amnesty International, the advocates hoped the picture would
change. "It kind of feels like a gift," Clairmont said, while holding up the
113-page report released by the human rights' watchdog.

Cheryl Hotchkiss, the campaigner for women's rights at Amnesty International,
said the report calls attention to the "alarmingly high rates" of sexual
violence against Native women. More than that, it identifies obstacles unique to
Indian Country, she said.

"All women have a right to be safe," Hotchkiss said.

The system of criminal jurisdiction in Indian Country shoulders most of the
blame in the report. Depending on the race of the victim and of the perpetrator,
as well as the location of the crime, prosecution could fall to the tribal,
state or federal governments.

But tribal governments are hindered by federal law and court decisions, the
report notes. The Indian Civil Rights Act of 1968 limits incarceration to one
year and fines to $5,000, and the U.S. Supreme Court has blocked tribes from
prosecuting non-Indians except where authorized by treaty or statute.

Tribes are further limited by inadequate federal resources for law enforcement
and justice systems, according to the report. "They've really limited the
ability of the tribal nations to respond to these crimes," Rachel Ward, an
Amnesty International researcher, said of the federal impositions on
sovereignty.

State governments are responsible for prosecuting non-Indian offenders and in
places like Alaska, where the federal government ceded jurisdiction. But the
system doesn't always work, according to the report.

"It is hard to prosecute cases where there is a Native American victim and a
non-Native American perpetrator," a former federal prosecutor told Amnesty
International.

Even when the FBI is responsible, there are problems, according to the report.
People interviewed by Amnesty International said they never hear about their
cases once federal agents enter the picture.

"They take the evidence and they're gone," Clairmont said. She said the FBI
often refuses to share information, which limits the tribes' ability to act on a
sexual violence case.

The report largely focuses on three areas -- Oklahoma, Alaska and the Standing
Rock Sioux Reservation in North and South Dakota -- due to the jurisdictional
issues posed in those localities. But Flying Earth said Native women everywhere
face the same challenges.

"Basically, you will find the same situations" on reservations across the
country, she said.

In Oklahoma, tribal land and individual Indian land is interspersed with state
land, a patchwork system that complicates the handling of sexual violence cases,
according to the report. The state has the 12th highest incidence of rape, based
on figures from the FBI.

In Alaska, the federal government gave jurisdiction to the state through Public
Law 280. The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that land owned by Alaska Native
corporations is not Indian Country. The sexual assault rate among Alaska Native
women surpasses the rate among other Native women.

The Standing Rock Sioux Reservation in North and South Dakota faces challenges
due its size and high rates of violence. "Crime rates on the reservation often
exceed those of its surrounding areas," the report says.

The report makes 53 recommendations to improve the justice system in Indian
Country. Of these, several key recommendations call on federal and state
governments, including the U.S. Congress, to take action to prevent violence
against Native women through consultation with tribes, changes in legislation,
better collection of data, increased federal funding and greater cooperation
among law enforcement and health agencies.

"When the federal government has failed to protect Native women -- one in three
Native women are victims of rape -- change must occur and it must occur now,"
said Joe Garcia, the president of the National Congress of American Indians. "It
is not only up to Indian Country to navigate through this 'maze of injustice,'
but it is also the federal government's responsibility to create a clear path
through it."

Get the Report:
Full Report | Press Release

Online Discussion:
Violence against Native American and Alaska Native Women (April 24, 2007)

Relevant Links:
Join Voices with Native American and Alaska Native Women and Take Action to Stop
the Violence - http://www.amnestyusa.org/maze


Related Stories:
Amnesty report on violence against Native women (4/24)
Husband of slain Navajo weaver found dead (4/18)
Navajo weaver killed a day before divorce was final (4/12)
Husband suspected in death of Navajo weaver (4/11)
Man acquitted for sexual assault of Native teen (03/27)
Tearful Native teen recalls sexual assault at trial (3/21)
Jodi Rave: Violence against Native women rising (3/12)
'Missing from the Circle' website launches (03/09)
Project seeks to create Indian Country crime database (3/2)
US Attorney: Critic hides contempt for tribes (01/03)
Opinion: Misleading stories on reservation homicide (1/2)
US Attorney: Tribes need more law enforcement (12/04)
Ute Reservation the 'murder capital of Colorado' (11/27)
Report outlines high murder rate of Native women (09/21)
Data shows high rates of Native violence in Farmington (08/31)
Pine Ridge Reservation shelter helps hundreds (08/10)
Walk raises awareness of domestic violence (05/12)
Shakopee Tribe awards anti-domestic violence grant (05/03)
Tribes unite for domestic violence awareness (04/25)
Men sentenced to life in prison for kidnap, rape (01/27)
Domestic violence an epidemic in Indian Country (11/8)
Editorial: Breaking the circle of domestic violence (10/26)
Figures show drop in Indian Country jail population (10/25)
Michigan tribe marches against domestic violence (10/21)
Navajo man leads walk against domestic violence (10/12)
Senate approves violence act with tribal provisions (10/5)
DOJ awards grants for Indian women safety sites (09/22)
Editorial: Protect Native women from domestic violence (09/12)
Domestic violence a problem on Montana reservations (9/9)
Violence Against Women Act set to expire this month (9/6)
Column: Genocide of Indian women continues today (08/15)
Violence Against Women Act includes tribal provisions (06/14)
Study finds high rates of trauma among two tribes (06/01)
Harjo: Native women aren't safe in Indian Country (04/29)
Two charged with rapes on Montana reservation (02/25)
Congress puts focus on Indian Country crime (11/22)
Violent crime on the rise on Navajo Nation (11/02)
Tribal rights recognized in domestic violence bill (10/26)
Alaska wants to reduce tribal powers in child welfare (09/09)
Two grants to combat domestic violence on reservation (09/01)
Justice bill shifts priorities in Indian Country (8/4)
Criminals on Navajo Nation sometimes set free (07/30)
Tribal authority over all Indians still unsettled question (06/23)
Native women in Oklahoma at high risk for violence (05/26)
Federal prosecutor seeks to change 'national shame' (04/19)
IHS compiles domestic violence research (10/29)
Native youth victimization outpaces nation (07/17)
Natives top violent crime list again (4/8)
One in 10 hate crimes target American Indians (10/1)
DOJ: American Indians highest injured (6/25)
DOJ: Violent crime plagues Indian Country (3/19)


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Thu Apr 26, 2007 7:53 pm

bthimiakis
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http://www.indianz.com/News/2007/002587.asp Campaign launched to stop violence against Native women Wednesday, April 25, 2007 Filed Under: National Native...
Brigitte Thimiakis
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Apr 27, 2007
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