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U.S. Authorities Fail to Protect
Native American and Alaska Native Women From Shocking Rates of Rape,
Reports Amnesty International
April 24, 2007- (Amnesty International) Native
American and Alaska Native women in the United States suffer disproportionately
high levels of rape and sexual violence, yet the federal government
has created substantial barriers to accessing justice, Amnesty International
(AI) asserted in a 113-page report released today. Justice Department
figures indicate that American Indian and Alaska Native women are
2.5 times more likely to be raped or sexually assaulted than women
in the United States in general; more than one in three Native women
will be raped in their lifetimes.
The United States government has created a complex
maze of tribal, state and federal jurisdictions that often allows
perpetrators to rape with impunity -- and in some cases effectively
creates jurisdictional vacuums that encourage assaults. It is necessary
to establish the location of the crime and the identity of the perpetrator
to determine which authorities have jurisdiction, during which critical
time is lost. This leads to inadequate investigations or a failure
to respond.
Further complications are the lack of trained Sexual
Assault Nurse Examiners (SANEs) at Indian Health Service (IHS) facilities
to provide forensic exams, and the potential for law enforcement
to mishandle evidence when rape kits are used. The result is that
Native women often:
* Do not get timely - or any - response from police.
* May not get forensic medical examinations.
* May never see their cases prosecuted.
"Native women are brutalized at an alarming
rate, and the United States government, a purported champion of
women's rights, is unfortunately contributing to the problem,"
said Larry Cox, executive director of Amnesty International USA
(AIUSA). "It is disgraceful that such abuse even exists today.
Without immediate action, an already abysmal and outrageous situation
for women could spiral even further out of control. It is time to
halt these human rights abuses that have raged unfettered since
this country was founded."
The AI report, Maze of Injustice: The failure to
protect Indigenous women from sexual violence in the USA, warned
that government figures, as disturbing as they are, grossly underestimate
the problem because many women are too fearful of inaction to report
their cases. According to one Oklahoma support worker, of 77 active
sexual assault/domestic violence cases involving Native American
women, only three victims reported their cases to the police.
The U.S. Government has undermined the authority
of tribal justice systems to respond to crimes of sexual violence
by consistent under-funding. Federal law limits the criminal sentences
that tribal courts can impose for any one offense to one year and
prohibits tribal courts from trying non-Indian suspects -- even
though data collected by the Department of Justice shows that up
to 86 percent of perpetrators are non-Indian.
In addition, AI's research suggests that there
is a failure at the state and federal level to pursue cases of sexual
violence against Native women involving non-Indian perpetrators.
One former federal prosecutor told AI, "It is hard to prosecute
cases where there is a Native American victim and a non-Native American
perpetrator." Once a case is denied at the state or federal
level, there is no further recourse for survivors of rape under
criminal law.
"When elders say, 'too many of our women and
children have been raped,' we know that we must come together to
overcome the darkness and end the silence. What we don't acknowledge,
we carry with us," said Denise Morris, executive director and
CEO of the Alaska Native Justice Center and a speaker at the report
launch. "The United States government has a legal and moral
responsibility to provide resources to Native organizations so they
can begin to develop solutions and promote healing and wellness
at the community level."
The report focuses primarily on three regions that
pose distinct jurisdictional challenges: Oklahoma, Alaska and Standing
Rock Sioux Reservation (North/South Dakota). The report finds that
regardless of the location or legal framework, the outcome is the
same: many Native women who have experienced sexual violence are
denied justice.
Oklahoma
As tribal lands in Oklahoma are non-contiguous and intersected by
state land, it can take weeks and even months to establish whether
tribal, state and/or federal authorities have jurisdiction over
a particular crime.
* AI learned of two Native American women who reportedly
were gang-raped by three non-Native men in Oklahoma; however, because
the women were forced to wear blindfolds, support workers were concerned
that the women would be unable to say whether the rapes took place
on federal, state or tribal land and that, because of jurisdictional
complexities in Oklahoma, the women may never see justice served.
* According to one service provider: "When
an emergency call comes in, [the] sheriff will say, 'but this is
Indian land.' Tribal police will show up and say the reverse. Then
they just bicker and don't do the job . . . which means no rape
kit, etc."
Standing Rock Sioux Reservation
* The Reservation covers 2.3 million acres in North
and South Dakota and is patrolled by Standing Rock Police Department
(SRPD). As of February 2006, the under-resourced department consisted
of six or seven patrol officers and two investigators.
* There have been times when only one officer was
on duty for the entire Reservation. Women often have to wait hours
or even days before receiving a response from SRPD, if they receive
one at all. Many survivors reported that they had experienced sexual
violence several times in their lives at the hands of different
perpetrators.
* Some survivors have to travel more than an hour
to get to the IHS hospital in Fort Yates, where they may discover
that no one on staff can conduct a sexual assault forensic exam.
Staff may send women to a medical facility in Bismarck, 80 miles
away -- those that make this journey may then face lengthy delays
and leave without an exam. If a woman has to go to a non-IHS facility,
she may initially be charged for the service. These factors can
be a serious barrier to reporting the crime and undergoing a forensic
examination.
Alaska
Due to a complex set of laws, state, rather than federal, agencies
provide law enforcement. The state has sought to restrict tribes
from exercising criminal jurisdiction while at the same time failing
to provide adequate law enforcement.
* Alaska ranks number one for rapes in the United
States, according to FBI statistics. Alaska Native women also experience
high levels of sexual violence in both rural and urban areas. According
to one study, between 2000 and 2003, Alaska Native people in Anchorage
were 9.7 times more likely to experience sexual assault than others
living in the city. Meanwhile, at least one-third of Alaska Native
villages that are not accessible by road have no law enforcement
presence at all. Alaska Native women may have to pay for an expensive
trip to reach a hospital or clinic for a sexual assault forensic
examination.
* In one case, an Alaska Native man became violent,
beating his wife with a shotgun and barricading himself in a house
with four children. As the village had no law enforcement, residents
called the State Troopers, located 150 miles away, to report the
violence. Troopers had to charter a plane to get to the village;
in the four-plus hours it took them to reach the village, the man
had raped a 13-year-old Alaska Native girl on a bed with an infant
crying beside her and her five-year-old brother and seven-year-old
cousin watching. In many cases, response to Alaska village crimes
can take days.
In addition to increasing levels of training, AI
urged federal, state and local authorities to take other concrete
steps to decrease sexual violence and increase services for Indigenous
women who are raped:
* The U.S. Congress should fully fund and implement
the Violence Against Women Act -- and in particular Tribal Title
(Title IX), the first-ever effort within VAWA to fight violence
against Native American and Alaska Native women. This includes a
national baseline study on sexual violence against Native women,
a study on the incidence of injury from sexual violence against
Native women and a Tribal Registry to track sex offenders and orders
of protection.
* The U.S. Congress should increase funding for
the Indian Health Service (IHS) and IHS contract facilities. Such
monies should be used to increase the number of Sexual Assault Nurse
Examiners so that survivors may receive timely forensic medical
examinations, at no charge, following sexual assault. Furthermore,
the IHS should ensure that appropriate protocols are in place for
the treatment of survivors of sexual violence.
* The federal government must provide the necessary
funding for police forces in Indian Country and Alaska Native villages,
with particular attention paid to improving coverage in rural areas
and the funding and resources to enable tribal authorities to develop
and maintain tribal courts.
* Federal and state governments should consult
and cooperate with tribal nations, and Native women in particular,
to institute effective plans of action to stop sexual violence against
Native women.
AI will continue to campaign in partnership with
Native American and Alaska Native women in the USA to address the
critical human rights abuses documented in this report. This report
is part of AI's global Stop Violence Against Women campaign.
For more information or to download the report, see:
http://www.amnestyusa.org/document.php?lang=e&id=ENGUSA20070424001
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