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Issue 33 1.15.13

January 09, 2013 1:05 PM | Deleted user
IN THIS ISSUE:
FWN Announcements
Press Releases

In the News
Events and Meetings
Opportunities
Pinay Lifestyle
Connecting with Your Pinay Roots

FWN ANNOUNCEMENTS

Our very own Cindy Romero. The new State of Health Commissioner of the Commonwealth of Virginia! Former President of Norfolk Academy of Medicine and Medical Society of Virginia.


Shared by: Rodel Rodis
Global Networking: Violence Against Women


Lost in all the media frenzy over the various economic fiscal cliffhangers facing the US on the last day of the 113th Congress on January 1, 2013 was the fate of the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) that had been extended every five years by the US Congress since it was first enacted in 1994 to address domestic and sexual abuse and to expand services and programs for victims of sexual crimes.
 
Though it passed the Senate by a 68 to 31 vote, the House Republican leadership refused to bring the measure for a vote on the last day of Congress fearing that a straight up or down vote would result in its passage.
 
As Sen. Patty Murray explained to CNN, VAWA had “provided life-saving assistance to millions of women and families across the nation. For battered women, the law has provided critical law enforcement protections and often a way out from a life of abuse. One reason the law has worked so well in protecting a broad group of women is that since its initial passage, every time the US Congress has reauthorized the bill, we have done so in a bipartisan way that extends the legislation's many protections to new groups of women.”
 
US lawmakers had been presented with statistics showing that a sexual assault occurs every two minutes in the US, a figure which may be an underestimation as authorities believe that more than 50% of rapes in the US go unreported. VAWA had provided funds to train about 500,000 law enforcement officials, judges, and prosecutors each year to help ensure that rape crimes are properly prosecuted. Since VAWA’s passage, more rape survivors have been willing to come forward and report the crimes against them. The rate of intimate partner sex crimes has dropped by more than 60% since VAWA's enactment.
 
In the House debate on VAWA, Rep. Gwen Moore (D-Wisconsin) described her own ordeal as a sexual assault victim to explain why VAWA needed to be reauthorized. The man who raped her, she said, took her underwear to display as a prize to his friends, who had all bet him that she couldn't be "had." "This is what American women are facing," Moore explained.
 
Rep. Moore’s point was further emphasized by a New York Times story on December 17 (“High School Football Rape Case Unfolds on Web”) about the rape of a 16-year old high school girl by two star football players in Steubenville, Ohio. The case drew widespread attention because the rapists committed their sexual assaults on the intoxicated minor in front of partygoers who recorded the rape on their cell phone cameras and posted them on the Internet. Despite the clear evidence of their depraved crimes, their football coach and a local judge vouched for their sterling character.
 
On December 18, the Economist reported the December 16 gang rape of a 23-year old medical student in New Delhi. “The police said the men were looking for some fun. They had been drinking, having a party, and decided to go on a joy ride. They began circling the capital in a private bus, the police said, when they spotted a couple looking for a ride home. They waved the man and woman onboard and charged them each 36 cents. And then, the police said, the men beat the couple with an iron rod and repeatedly raped the woman as the bus circled the city.”
 
The woman suffered severe injuries to her head and sexual organs and had to be flown to Singapore for treatment of her injuries where she eventually died but not before news of her brutal rape drew outrage all over India and by Indians all over the world who demanded changes in the government’s treatment of rape. According to news reports, of the more than 600 rape cases reported in New Delhi in2012, only one led to a conviction.
 
“Change is possible, but the police must document reports of rape and sexual assault, and investigations and court cases have to be fast-tracked and not left to linger for years,” wrote Sonia Faleiro in an op-ed piece in the New York Times on January1, 2013. “If victims believe they will receive justice, they will be more willing to speak up. If potential rapists fear the consequences of their actions, they will not pluck women off the streets with impunity.”

While the women of India were looking up to VAWA as a legislative example of how to safeguard their rights, House Republicans – especially members of a group informally known as the “Men’s Rights Caucus” - were successfully blocking reauthorization of the law because of their opposition to provisions expanding the rights of immigrant women, gays and Native Americans.   

According to Erika Eichelberger, (January 3, 2013,The Nation, “Blocking VAWA, The GOP Keeps Up the War on Women”), House Republican Majority Leader Eric Cantor “dug in his heels over the Native American provision, which would have expanded tribal courts’ jurisdiction over domestic violence offenses committed on reservations against Native women by non-Native men.” Under current US law, white American men cannot be charged for raping Native American women in tribal lands.  
 
As an immigration lawyer, I am especially dismayed by the demise of VAWA because of the protections it provided to spouse-victims of domestic violence which allowed them to “self-petition” and obtain immigration relief independent of their abusive spouse.
 
Since VAWA’s passage in 1994, I have represented many Filipino women who were petitioned by their US citizen spouses and who were then subjected to repeated sexual battery and were unable to escape their abusive situations because of fear of deportation. Because of VAWA, the battered Pinays were able to obtain their green cards even without the petition or cooperation of their spouses.
 
VAWA will be reintroduced this year in a Congress that now has more women than ever before. It should receive the vote of even those male members of Congress who believe that every human being has a fundamental right to be free from violence, rape, and sexual assault and that society’s most vulnerable and marginalized members deserve to be protected.


(Send comments to Rodel50@gmail.com or mail them to the Law Offices of Rodel Rodis at 2429 Ocean Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94127 or call 415.334.7800).


FILIPINA CALL TO ACTION
SBA Extends SBW Awards Nomination Deadline:
The U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) Baltimore District Office has extended the deadline for nominations for the successful small person who might become Maryland's "Small Business Person of the Year" for 2013 and compete for the national title during National Small Business Week Nominees are also being sought for several local Champion and Special Award categories. The new deadline for nomination submissions is Thursday, January 31, 2013. For more info: www.sba.gov/md


HOLD THE DATE:
The Women’s Policy Summit, January 17, 2013, in Sacramento is co-sponsored by the Commission and the California Legislative Women’s Caucus. The Summit program and a mail-in registration form can be found at www.ccrwf.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/Womens-Policy-Summit-2013-invitation-F31.pdf


One Billion Rising
Eve Ensler and Tony Stroebel's film "One Billion Rising" is gaining momentum. You can watch the trailer for the film here: http://onebillionrising.org/blog/entry/one-billion-rising-trailer.

  PRESS RELEASES

Ambassador Cuisia Bids Final Farewell to Senator Inouye

Honolulu--Sen. Daniel Inouye, the leading voice of the Philippines in the United States Congress, was laid out to rest here today with Ambassador Jose L. Cuisia Jr. joining President Barack Obama and other ranking American officials in bidding farewell to the Hawaii legistlator
. Read full text.

IN THE NEWS
WSJ Profiles Delhi Rape Victim


(Harish Tyagi/European Pressphoto Agency)


The Wall Street Journal's South Asia Bureau profiled the young woman who was raped on a moving bus Dec. 16 in New Delhi and later died of the injuries sustained in the attack. - Wall Street Journal.
Read more...


Video shows teens joking about
alleged rape victim

In August, the family of a 16-year-old girl accused multiple Stuebenville, Ohio, high school students of raping her while she was passed out during a night of pre-football-season partying. - CBS News. Read more...


Why the Catholic Church should apologize to Rizal's mother


Coming so swiftly on the heels of Christmas and the Slaughter of the Innocents, the annual Rizal Day holiday on Dec. 30 usually passes fleetingly by as just another blessed day off, before we all plunge merrily into the noisy revelries and inebriations of New Year's Eve. - Inquirer. Read more...

Asian-Americans speak out against Google app they call offensive

The maker of a Google app thinks it's fun to make yourself look Asian by changing the shape of your eyes and wearing a Fu Manchu mustache and rice paddy hat.
- CNN. Read more...


When traffic stops go bad
- How cops can demean Black and Brown Men

Traffic stops by police in urban communities go bad far too frequently because of patrol policies that demean and rob minority residents of their dignity. - New America Media. Read more...


The Only Job I can Do - A Young Mother's Farm Work Story

Young farmworker Lorena Hernandez, a single mother from Mexico, describes her toil with little chance for education and to a future. - New America Media. Read more...


EVENTS AND MEETINGS

California

FWN Professional Tuesdays: 12 Life Areas - the Foundation for Life Planning, January 22, 2013, Tuesday at 5:30 PM to 8:30 PM, Hobart Building, 10th Floor, 582 Market St, San Francisco. Click for info.

A Celebration of Women, Life, & Liberty - 40 Years of Roe v. Wade,
January 26, 2013, Saturday at 10:00 AM to 12:00 PM - Justin Herman Plaza, San Francisco. Click for info.

Fred Korematsu Day Heroes Celebration,
January 27, 2013, Sunday at 1:00 PM to 4:30 PM - Herbst Theatre, 401 Van Ness Ave, San Francisco. Click for info.

Bay Area League Day, February 2, 2013,
Saturday at 9:00 AM to 2:10 PM - First Unitarian Church of Oakland, 685 14th St at Castro, Oakland. Click for info.

B2B Social Media Workshop,
February 5-6, 2013, at 8:30 AM to 12:00 PM - East Bay & San Francisco. Click for info.

2013 Books of Lists Party,
February 7, 2013, Thursday at 5:30 PM to 8:30 PM at the Four Seasons Hotel, 757 Market St, San Francisco. Click for info.

Annual Mayors' Economic Forecast,
February 14, 2013, Thursday at 7:15 AM to 10:00 AM - San Francisco Marriott Marquis, 55 Fourth St, San Francisco. Click for info.

Oregon

Top 3 Most Effective Marketing Strategies, January 16, 2013, Wednesday at 5:30 PM to 7:30 PM - HQ La Statefarm Insurance, 2858 NE Sandy Blvd, Portland. Click for info.

Brand Yourself for Leadership and Business Success with Karen Kang
, January 31, 2013, Thursday at 5:30 PM to 7:30 PM - Beaverton City Hall, First Conference Floor Room, 4755 SW Griffith Dr., Beaverton. Click for info.

Virginia

Procurement Academy: Capture Planning, Proposal Development and Win Strategies, January 16, 2013, Wednesday at 7:30 AM to 10:30 AM - TeqCorner, 1616 Anderson Road, Mclean. Click for info.


OPPORTUNITIES

Job Position: Executive Director
Organization: California Commission on the Status of Women
 Final Filing Date for Position: February, 15, 2013
http://www.women.ca.gov/images/pdf/whats_new/ccswg_director_job_announce.pdf


PINAY LIFESTYLE
From a Manila slum emerges an unlikely ballerina
The ghetto called Aroma, reeks of putrefying trash collected by its residents for recycling. Half-naked children with grimy faces play on muddy dirt roads lined by crumbling shanties of tarpaulin walls, cracked tin roofs, and communal toilets. Read more...

CONNECTING WITH YOUR PINAY ROOTS
With the Australian Open starting, nostalgia for my tennis glory days has been arising in me. In my family, tennis has strong roots - both my father and grandfather play - and because of these strong roots, my sister and I have a deep love and appreciation for the sport; we both played varsity high school tennis, were avid players in the United States Tennis Association (USTA), and played collegiate level tennis at our alma maters (all thanks to our coach: Dad). As hype for the first big tournament of the year, the Australian Open, begins, I started wondering (again) what tennis in the Philippines is like. According to an article I read on the Inquirer, the Philippine Columbian Association Open is the biggest tournament for Filipino tennis players. The tournament is held in Manila and has been running for thirty-one years! You can read the full article here: http://lifestyle.inquirer.net/84551/filipino-tennis-players-off-to-australian-open
Send comments to epahayagan@ffwn.org
- Rebecca

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