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Anti-Abortion Law Targets Native American Women
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Following scant debate, the Senate last week approved an amendment to an Indian health care bill that would permanently prohibit the use of federal dollars to fund abortions for Native Americans except in rare cases. The move has prompted an outcry from women’s health advocates -- who point out that a similar ban has existed on a temporary basis for years -- and from tribal groups, who are asking why Native American women should be subject to restrictions not applicable to other ethnic groups. Some charge that the Senate proposal is overtly racist.
The issue is a sensitive one in American Indian communities, where women are statistically more likely to be victims of rape or sexual assault than other American women -- but also where victims very rarely use the exceptions to the current federally funded abortion ban in the wake of those crimes. In the face of that discrepancy, advocates say, Congress should encourage victims to take advantage of the available services, not impose tighter restrictions.
The debate pits anti-abortion lawmakers on both sides of the aisle against health-care advocates who fear the latest move could set the stage for broader abortion prohibitions under federal programs outside the realm of Indian health services. In addition, there is the intrigue of scandal, for the sponsor of the controversial amendment, Sen. David Vitter (R-La.), made headlines last year for his earlier entanglement in a prostitution ring. Several abortion-rights sources suggested that Vitter -- who built his political career on family-values issues -- is trying to bolster his conservative credentials in the wake of that embarrassment.
The controversy swirls around a federal law -- known as the Hyde amendment -- that prohibits abortion coverage under Medicaid, Medicare and Indian Health Service programs. While the Hyde law must be renewed by Congress each year, the Vitter amendment -- which the Senate approved on Feb. 26 -- would apply Hyde’s restrictions permanently to IHS beneficiaries. For that reason, tribal health advocates charge that the Vitter language treads on the sovereignty of Indian communities and places unique constraints on native women.
"It’s a very racist amendment," said Charon Asetoyer, executive director of the Native American Women’s Health Education Resource Center, "[because] it puts another layer of restrictions on the only race of people whose health care is governed primarily by the federal government. All women are subject to the Hyde amendment, so why would they put another set of conditions on us?"
Vitter’s office did not return several calls and e-mails requesting comment.
A number of women’s health groups have criticized the Vitter amendment as well, claiming it will have no practical effect on women’s health services.
"Apart from being bad public health policy," Planned Parenthood said in a statement, "this language is duplicative of current law and serves only to politicize important legislation regarding comprehensive health care for Native Americans."
Though the Hyde amendment -- named for its sponsor, the late Illinois Rep. Henry Hyde -- first took effect in 1977, Congress must reapply it annually through the appropriations process. That, according to Vitter, puts the Hyde language "in a tenuous and precarious posture. It puts it up for debate and possible change of policy every year, every time we debate a new Health and Human Services appropriations bill. Therefore, it doesn’t make the policy very solid, very secure, or very clear."
See more stories tagged with: gender, abortion, hyde amendment, sexual assault, native american, david vitter, reproductive justice, american indian
Mike Lillis follows Congress for the Washington Independent. Previously, he covered health care policy with Inside Washington Publishers, and was DC correspondent for Iowa's Waterloo Courier. He lives in Washington, DC.
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