[IPSM] South Dakota Abortion Ban Draws Fiery Opposition from Native Americans
aaron at resist.ca
aaron at resist.ca
Tue Mar 28 23:01:34 PST 2006
hi all,
Democracy Now had some interesting coverage today on native americans who
are resisting the abortion ban in south dakota by attempting to open
planned parenthood clinics on reserves. check it out here:
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=06/03/28/1432205
Democracy Now
South Dakota Abortion Ban Draws Fiery Opposition from Native Americans
RUSH TRANSCRIPT
AMY GOODMAN: We're joined by the phone right now by Charon Asetoyer,
founder and executive director of Native American Women's Health Education
Resource Center, grassroots women.s health institute on the Yankton
reservation in South Dakota. We're also joined by Sarah Stoesz, on the
line from Minnesota, President and C.E.O. of Planned Parenthood Minnesota,
North Dakota, South Dakota. We welcome you both to Democracy Now! Let's
begin with Sarah Stoesz of Planned Parenthood. Can you talk about the
significance of what has taken place now in South Dakota?
SARAH STOESZ: Well, South Dakota has passed an extremely sleeping ban on
abortion, a near total ban on abortion, the first time any state has taken
such an action since Roe v. Wade, so it's had a ripple effect, not only
across South Dakota, where there have been political reverberations that
will be felt definitely during the next six months and at the ballot box
in November, but also across the United States and, in fact, all around
the world. Our phone has been ringing off the hook since the 23rd of
February, when the law was passed, with reporters calling us from New
Zealand and from England and from Japan and Germany, and so on, saying,
.What on earth is happening in your country, and what on earth is
happening in South Dakota?. So there has been intense focus on this
legislative effort in South Dakota and a great deal of concern, of course,
because of the recent changeover in the Supreme Court.
AMY GOODMAN: Last night, a Mississippi ban was killed, is that right?
SARAH STOESZ: Well, that.s correct, but I don't expect that a ban quite as
significant as the ban that was passed in South Dakota will be passed in
other states. I sincerely think that the legislators and governor in South
Dakota have made a significant political overreach, but I will also say
that there's been some benefit to the pro-choice community, in them doing
this, because it has really awakened and stirred the passions of the
reproductive rights movement across the country. And there's quite a bit
of grassroots organizing that is beginning to take place all around the
country, certainly in South Dakota, but in other places, as well, to
ensure that this ban never takes effect in South Dakota and similar bans
are not passed elsewhere.
AMY GOODMAN: Charon Asetoyer, do you support opening a clinic on a
reservation, where women could get abortions there?
CHARON ASETOYER: Yes, I do. I think that it would be a significant help to
women at that end of the state, both Native and non-Native alike. They
would have easier access. They wouldn't have to travel so far. And there
are a lot of Native women that I'm aware of that actually want to abort,
but don't have the means to get across the state, let alone pay for the
abortion, and so on and so forth. So it makes it extremely difficult. And
time is always of the essence, you know. It's always a very important
factor in whether a woman can access those services or not. And so, I
think I definitely would support the opening of a women's clinic there on
the Oglala Sioux Nation.
AMY GOODMAN: Sarah Stoesz, is Planned Parenthood considering working with
the President of the Oglala Sioux, President Fire Thunder, in opening such
a clinic or running one themselves on the reservation?
SARAH STOESZ: Yeah, President Fire Thunder is a good friend to Planned
Parenthood, and in fact, she's a member of the South Dakota Campaign for
Healthy Families, and we collaborate with her regularly. At this point, we
are not planning on closing our clinic in Sioux Falls. I want to make it
very clear that although the law was passed and signed by the governor, it
does not take effect until July 1. And during that period, we intend to
challenge the law in court to prevent it from being -- from ever taking
effect or to bring it to the voters directly in South Dakota. There's a
provision that allows that to happen. And so we're currently -- the
Campaign for Healthy Families is currently in the signature gathering
phase of our work to bring this law to the voters. So we are very
confident that the voters will overturn this law. We do not believe that
it will ever go into effect, and we are very, very committed to keeping
our clinic in Sioux Falls open.
We have a clinic also in Rapid City, which is on the western end of the
state. And we do not perform abortion at that clinic. The reason we don't
is because there are not any doctors in South Dakota who agree to perform
abortion, and so consequently we fly doctors in from Minnesota to South
Dakota to Sioux Falls eight days per month to offer these services. And
it's absolutely true that access to abortion is very, very limited in
South Dakota as a result of all of this.
AMY GOODMAN: Well, let me turn Charon Asetoyer. This raises as a lot of
interesting issues about jurisdiction on a Native American reservation.
South Dakota State Attorney General Larry Long said major crimes committed
on reservations come under state jurisdiction if they're committed by
non-Indians, that only abortions performed by a Native American abortion
practitioner would have a chance of staying legal if the abortion ban were
upheld.
CHARON ASETOYER: Well, that's a possibility, to find a Native American
doctor that could be brought in to perform pregnancy termination services.
I know the Feminist Women's Health Clinics have contacted me. In fact, one
of the only Native American women in the country that runs an abortion
clinic is Katrina Cantrell out in the Redding office in California. She
sits on our board of directors. She contacted me wanting to assist Cecilia
in this endeavor, so if it's not a Planned Parenthood endeavor, then it
would be an independent endeavor.
AMY GOODMAN: We're going to have to leave it there. Charon Asetoyer,
founder and executive director of Native American Women.s Health Education
Resource Center, as well as Sarah Stoesz, President and C.E.O. of Planned
Parenthood Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, thanks so much for all
joining us.
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