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Oglala Sioux Tribal Council votes to ban abortions, suspends Cecelia Fire Thunder
Repost from The Black Hills Pioneer.
Sad news indeed. Regardless of this, women of all races who support choice will continue to stand in solidarity with Cecelia.
Note the spiteful response on anti-choice websites in response:
http://news.google.com/news?hl=en&ned=us&ie=UTF-8&q="Fire+Thunder"+abortion
SIOUX FALLS (AP) - The Oglala Sioux Tribal Council voted to ban abortions on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation and suspended the tribal president because it said she solicited donations on behalf of the tribe for a proposed abortion clinic without the council's approval.
''The whole thing was an ambush,'' said Tribal President Cecelia Fire Thunder.
Fire Thunder said the idea never was to open a clinic that performs abortions, but rather to open a women's health facility that would provide family planning information and emergency and traditional contraceptives.
''If that's the way it was presented to people in the first place, I think she would have been OK,'' said Will Peters, a tribal council representative from the Pine Ridge District.
''Her stand, by what we read and what we hear from all accounts, was to support abortion. I've never seen such a turnaround.''
Peters made a motion at Tuesday's council meeting to suspend Fire Thunder indefinitely. When that failed, the council voted to suspend her for 20 days until an impeachment hearing could take place.
After Gov. Mike Rounds signed a bill that would ban most abortions in South Dakota, Fire Thunder said she would work to open a Planned Parenthood clinic on the reservation, beyond the reach of state law. Many believe abortion to be against Lakota values.
Planned Parenthood issued a press release thanking Fire Thunder, but said it had no plans to open a clinic in Pine Ridge or anywhere else in South Dakota.
Fire Thunder, who was out of state Tuesday, said the people who brought the complaint were the same people who have been opposing her presidency since she was elected in November 2004.
A group of women has agreed to form a board of directors for the proposed women's clinic, which would be called Sacred Choices.
Betty Bull Bear, one of the board members, said it would be a wellness center, and the board would wait to see what happens with a statewide abortion ban referendum and any subsequent legal challenges before deciding whether to attempt to provide any abortion services.
©The Black Hills Pioneer, Newspapers, South Dakota, SD 2006
Note the spiteful response on anti-choice websites in response:
http://news.google.com/news?hl=en&ned=us&ie=UTF-8&q="Fire+Thunder"+abortion
SIOUX FALLS (AP) - The Oglala Sioux Tribal Council voted to ban abortions on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation and suspended the tribal president because it said she solicited donations on behalf of the tribe for a proposed abortion clinic without the council's approval.
''The whole thing was an ambush,'' said Tribal President Cecelia Fire Thunder.
Fire Thunder said the idea never was to open a clinic that performs abortions, but rather to open a women's health facility that would provide family planning information and emergency and traditional contraceptives.
''If that's the way it was presented to people in the first place, I think she would have been OK,'' said Will Peters, a tribal council representative from the Pine Ridge District.
''Her stand, by what we read and what we hear from all accounts, was to support abortion. I've never seen such a turnaround.''
Peters made a motion at Tuesday's council meeting to suspend Fire Thunder indefinitely. When that failed, the council voted to suspend her for 20 days until an impeachment hearing could take place.
After Gov. Mike Rounds signed a bill that would ban most abortions in South Dakota, Fire Thunder said she would work to open a Planned Parenthood clinic on the reservation, beyond the reach of state law. Many believe abortion to be against Lakota values.
Planned Parenthood issued a press release thanking Fire Thunder, but said it had no plans to open a clinic in Pine Ridge or anywhere else in South Dakota.
Fire Thunder, who was out of state Tuesday, said the people who brought the complaint were the same people who have been opposing her presidency since she was elected in November 2004.
A group of women has agreed to form a board of directors for the proposed women's clinic, which would be called Sacred Choices.
Betty Bull Bear, one of the board members, said it would be a wellness center, and the board would wait to see what happens with a statewide abortion ban referendum and any subsequent legal challenges before deciding whether to attempt to provide any abortion services.
©The Black Hills Pioneer, Newspapers, South Dakota, SD 2006
For more information:
http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?BRD=130...
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IMC Network
Oglala Sioux Tribe
ATTN: President Fire Thunder
P. O. Box 2070
Pine Ridge, SD 57770
or
ATTN: PRESIDENT FIRE THUNDER
PO BOX 990
Martin, SD 57751
Or are we seeing pure political antagonism? She had to fight to get her position, and there were those who opposed her.
And, to the women who says Lakota's value "life" not death...abortion isn't death...how do I know? I'm still alive.
However if they become illegal then it WILL be about death.