Rome News-Tribune

Domestic violence victims don’t need added fear of deportatio­n

- The (Hackensack, N.J.) Record

The nation’s most prominent domestic violence hotline has been lighting up a lot more lately when it comes to immigratio­n-related calls. This is due in no small part to the stepped-up approach under the Trump administra­tion to essentiall­y apprehend anyone who is undocument­ed almost anywhere they go.

As The Associated Press reported, the National Domestic Violence Hotline, establishe­d by Congress in 1996 and partly reliant on federal funding, said last week in its annual report that it responded to 323,660 phone calls, texts and online contacts in 2016. Of these calls, 7,053 involved immigratio­n-related issues — up nearly 30 percent from 2015.

Victims of domestic violence, in general, are reluctant to contact authoritie­s in the case of abuse because they fear retributio­n. Now, many of these victims have an added worry: the fear of being deported.

Katie Ray-Jones, the hotline’s CEO, said many of the callers were not U.S. citizens and were warned by their abusers that they and their families would be deported if the abuse was reported to the police. In some cases, she said, the abusers had threatened to call immigratio­n authoritie­s. In addition, RayJones said, relatives, friends and neighbors of immigrant abuse victims who might have in the past contacted authoritie­s are also reluctant to do so for fear they, too, might be targeted for deportatio­n.

“We’re not in a place where we can say, ‘Oh, don’t worry. That’s not going to happen.’” Ray-Jones said

Such is the grim plight for thousands of nameless abuse victims, mostly women but also men, who may be violently taunted, seriously injured or even killed because of the ham-fisted and less than passionate approach to immigratio­n policy put forward by President Donald Trump and his Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly, who recently said that even a “single DUI” can start the deportatio­n process.

Of course, this is not just a national issue, but a very local one as well. At a town-hall-style meeting in late February at City Hall in Passaic, Police Chief Luis Guzman and Mayor Hector Lora tried to reassure those present not to be afraid to report crimes, even in cases of domestic violence. No doubt, in households across North Jersey, conversati­ons among immigrants, some of whom have been here for decades, are taking place about how to approach such subjects under the new regime.

Ray-Jones said her staffers have encouraged domestic violence victims to seek refuge at domestic violence shelters, even though some victims fear such facilities might also be targeted by immigratio­n authoritie­s, if not today, then possibly sometime in the future. Kim Gandy, president of the National Network to End Domestic Violence, said it made sense that immigratio­n-related calls to the abuse hotline, which allows callers to remain anonymous, would increase.

Mayors from Denver to Los Angeles and elsewhere have begun to speak up on the issue of how the new immigratio­n policy is affecting domestic violence cases. More pressure, perhaps from municipal officials in North Jersey, should be brought on the Trump administra­tion to give these abuse victims some peace of mind. Domestic violence is an awful crime against humanity, and it should be treated as such. An abuse victim’s immigratio­n status shouldn’t be part of the conversati­on, and certainly shouldn’t add to the grave fear these victims live in already.

 ??  ?? Letters to the editor: Roman Forum, Post Office Box 1633, Rome, GA 30162-1633 or email MColombo@RN-T.com
Letters to the editor: Roman Forum, Post Office Box 1633, Rome, GA 30162-1633 or email MColombo@RN-T.com

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