Fidest – Agenzia giornalistica/press agency

Quotidiano di informazione – Anno 36 n° 113

Posts Tagged ‘native women’

U.S.A.: Congress Passes Bipartisan Protection for Native Women—VAWA

Posted by fidest press agency su venerdì, 1 marzo 2013

(Helena, Mont.) – Native women advocates in the United States are praising lawmakers for passage of an inclusive, bipartisan Violence Against Women Reauthorization Act that would afford protection to all women and victims of domestic violence. The bipartisan bill, S. 47, passed by the Senate in February 2013 and now by the House, 286 to 138, includes critical provisions to restore and strengthen tribal authority to protect Native women from violence in Indian country. The hard-fought passage comes over 500 days after VAWA expired and the legislation stalled during the 112th Session of Congress.Once signed into law, the bill will restore concurrent criminal jurisdiction to tribal governments over non-Indians having ties to the tribe and who commit domestic violence and dating violence against Native women in Indian country or violate protection orders. Non-Indian offenders commit vast majority of the violent crimes against Native women. “In many cases, these non-Indian perpetrators make a deliberate choice to live on our reservations, whether in connection with marriage to a tribal member or to avoid accountability for violent crimes committed against Native women,” said Terri Henry, Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians Tribal Councilwoman- Paint Town Community and Co-Chair of the National Congress of American Indians’ Task Force on Violence Against Native Women. Current United States law creates a criminal jurisdiction gap for tribal governments over non-Indians , and the federal and state officials which have authority to prosecute these crimes are failing to do so at alarmingly high rates. “This bill would strengthen the ability of tribal governments to protect Native women locally from domestic and dating violence,” Henry added. The long overdue reauthorization of VAWA comes at a critical time. “One in three Native women will be raped in her lifetime, and six in ten will be physically assaulted,” said Lucy Simpson, Executive Director of the National Indigenous Women’s Resource Center, Inc. Simpson added that, “even worse, on some reservations, the murder rate for Native women is ten times the national average.” “Native women have endured violence since colonization, and their blood continues to be shed due to the unjust and unacceptable jurisdictional loopholes in United States law,” said Juana Majel, 1st Vice President of the National Congress of American Indians and Co-Chair of its Task Force on Violence Against Native Women. “We are pleased that Congress has finally stepped up to address the unchecked violence against Native women by freeing the hands of Indian nations–the most appropriate entities–to protect Native women in their own communities from rapists and batters,” she added. The Indian Law Resource Center, the National Congress for American Indians’ Task Force on Violence Against Women, Clan Star, Inc., and the National Indigenous Women’s Resource Center have been working diligently both domestically and in the international arena to restore safety to Native women and to protect their most basic human right, the right to be free of violence.

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