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‘A slap in the face': activists reel as Trump administration removes crucial missing Indigenous peoples report

‘A slap in the face': activists reel as Trump administration removes crucial missing Indigenous peoples report

The Guardian20-03-2025
Since January, Donald Trump's presidency has been marked by a series of radical changes. Of note is the way troves of previously publicly available information on government websites such as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) or National Institutes of Health (NIH) have quietly gone dark.
One such page is the the Not Invisible Act Commission's final report from November 2023. The Not Invisible Act Commission was mandated by bipartisan legislation and signed into law by Trump himself. The report was a collaboration between the justice department and the interior department to address, document and respond to the missing and murdered Indigenous peoples (MMIP) crisis, in which Indigenous communities experience disproportionate rates of abduction, assault and murder. Accurate statistics about the MMIP and missing and murdered Indigenous women (MMIW) crises can be limited and dated, but, as of 2019, homicide was the third most common cause of death for Indigenous girls aged 15 to 19 and Indigenous women aged 20 to 24.
The Not Invisible Act Commission's final report was a culmination of seven in-person field hearings held across the country and a one-day virtual national hearing. Nearly 600 people attended the hearings and 260 people, including survivors, victims, family members, advocates and law enforcement gave testimony to the commission. As a result of those hearings, the commission issued its final report of recommendations to address the crisis.
Having a resource like the Not Invisible Act Commission's final report provided Indigenous people and governments, as well as federal, state and local branches of the US government, with data and suggestions on how to reduce the crises. The act itself was historic, not only because it shed light on an issue that Indian Country has faced for decades, but also because it was the first bill that was introduced and passed by four Indigenous US congressional members.
Despite the report no longer being available online, advocates say the fight to bring light to and end the MMIP and MMIW crises continues.
Charolette Gonzales, the policy and advocacy director of the Coalition to Stop Violence Against Native Women (CSVANW) said that she and other staffers were shocked when the Not Invisible Act Commission's report was removed from the federal website.
'They were like, 'What does this mean for the future of other information that supports our work?'' said Gonzales, who is Diné and San Ildefonso Pueblo. '[We] make sure that our communities are informed. What does that mean for them?'
The coalition focuses on preventative work, or trying to stop violence against Indigenous women before it happens.
'When doing this education, we are better able to equip them with the ability to advocate for themselves, and that work is really important as we move forward, especially with these unprecedented times of this current presidential administration,' she said.
Karrisa Newkirk, of the Oklahoma-based MMIW Chahta, an organization that supports affected families through financial assistance, provides training opportunities for law enforcement agencies, and works with victims to help them heal after experiencing violence, said that the work doesn't stop just because of a decision made in Washington.
'When it comes to our work and what we do, I don't feel like we've missed a step,' she said. 'We're going to continue to serve our families exactly how we should and always have. When it comes to other MMIWs across the United States, I truly feel like it kind of puts us back in time a little bit, where people aren't going to see what a real crisis it is.'
Newkirk said that after the commission collected the data, it should have been used to make tangible changes. Still, having a national database that tracked MMIW cases was vital.
'Even though there were great strides in the last couple years, them removing that was like a slap in the face. It was a huge step back.' she said. 'It felt like we were being heard and recognized, and then all of a sudden it felt like that was no longer what it was anymore … When you think about that as someone that's in the work and you know how many people already don't know about it, and then it's removed from the United States website, it's definitely disheartening.'
The CSVANW has begun discussing creating a database of its own, one built with information that the organization has collected over the years, including documents and reports that the Department of Justice previously issued. This method of ensuring that vital documents and resources are stored somewhere other than on government agency's websites is something that some advocates have been pushing for since the website purges began.
The National Indigenous Women's Resource Center, Inc (NIWRC), a non-profit organization that works to end violence against Native women, children and communities, for example, has a version of the Not Invisible Act's report that is still accessible.
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'We're taking it upon ourselves to collect as much information as we can as it slowly becomes unavailable to us on purpose,' Gonzales said. 'I think the censorship is a really hard hit to our communities, especially to our work. We already have limited resources as not only just a Native organization and survivor-led organization, but also as tribal people who live in these pueblos and work with our people.'
MMIW Chahta also tracks its own numbers, and is trying to overcome racial misclassification by law enforcement.
Tribal communities are also concerned about whether or not treaties, agreements made between sovereign nations, will be upheld by the US government, Gonzales said. The US has had a long history of violating treaties even before Trump's election.
Since he was sworn in, Trump and Elon Musk have called on the General Services Administration to terminate the leases of roughly 7,500 federal offices, including 25 regional offices of the Bureau of Indian Affairs. On Friday, Trump rescinded a Biden-era executive order, which aimed to strengthen tribal sovereignty for the 574 federally recognized tribes in the nation.
Following the removal of the Not Invisible Act Commission's final report page, federal agencies have flagged hundreds of words to limit or avoid, including, 'indigenous community', 'tribal', and 'Native American'. Defense department websites removed pages about Indigenous code talkers, whose usage of Choctaw and Navajo languages to communicate messages were vital for winning the first and second world wars.
Of the extreme changes being made by the administration and their implications for Indigenous people, Gonzales said: 'A lot of community members, along with our staff, are emotionally exhausted everyday we hear about new executive orders coming out.
'Our survivors and our resources truly help decrease the violence that happens in our communities … And so, once we heard this, I think our mind instantly went to the fact that Native women will die if we don't have federal funding. That's just a fact.'
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