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| Feminist Majority President Eleanor Smeal and other
feminist leaders meet with State Department officials to argue
that sex traffickers should not be given a way out of prosecution
by the inclusion of the word 'force' in proposed legislation.
Smeal argues that women are often coerced into stating that
they consented to their situation, and argues that sex traffickers
- not women victimized by the illegal sex trade - should stand
trial and face prosecution. |
| The Feminist Majority sends a delegation to the Millennium
March on Washington for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender
Rights. Eleanor Smeal speaks to a crowd of 800,000
gathered on the mall to support LGBT rights, hate crimes legislation,
and equal rights legislation. |
| Eleanor Smeal, president of the Feminist
Majority, and Mavis Leno, chair of the Foundation's
Campaign
to Stop Gender Apartheid in Afghanistan unveil the Back
to School Campaign - a new initiative to raise public awareness
of gender apartheid and expand educational opportunities for
Afghan women and girls. The Back
to School Campaign includes an Adopt-A-School Project,
an Afghan Women's Scholarship Program, and a petition drive
urging the U.S. government to do more to help Afghan women
and girls. Within weeks of the announcement, over 80 groups
join the effort - from college feminist groups to women's
organizations to elementary school classes. |

Without adequate classroom space, girls gather in this
courtyard in a Pakistan refugee camp to attend class.
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| The Feminist Majority wages legislative and online campaigns
against the Coburn Amendment that would bar the Food and Drug
Administration from testing, developing or approving abortion-inducing
pills, including mifepristone. Meningioma patient Professor
Doris Laird writes to members of Congress, telling how
mifepristone is saving her life and urging Congress to defeat
the Coburn Amendment. For the first time, Representative Tom
Coburn's (R-OK) amendment is defeated in the House, thanks
to the efforts of women members of Congress and women's rights
groups. |

Eleanor Smeal and Mavis Leno deliver 72,000 petitions
calling for more action to
end gender apartheid.
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Chair of the Campaign to Stop Gender
Apartheid in Afghanistan Mavis Leno, Director of Policy
and Research Jennifer Jackman, and President Eleanor
Smeal meet with Secretary of State Madeleine Albright
and top officials in the state department on the horrific
treatment of women and girls in Afghanistan, delivering
72,000 petitions from concerned FM members and supporters.
FM learns that the state department is receiving more mail
on this issue than any other foreign policy issue. |
|
The Feminist Majority, along with the NOW Legal
Defense and Education Fund, National Organization for Women,
and leaders against domestic violence work to win reauthorization
of the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA). Despite strong
bi-partisan support for the bill, Republican leadership
in Congress stalls on bringing the bill to a vote, threatening
to allow it to expire, cutting off funding for women's and
domestic violence resources throughout the country.
After the House passes the reauthorization bill, feminist
leaders, including Eleanor Smeal, Patricia Ireland
of NOW, and Gail Shaffer of Business and Professional
Women, along with leading members of Congress, hold a press
conference, calling for a vote on VAWA as a stand-alone
bill. Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott (R-MS) threatens
to attach VAWA to a bill that President Clinton had promised
to veto.
Days later, the Senate proposes to add VAWA to the Sex
Trafficking Victims Protection Act, along with other measures.
On October 12, the reauthorization of VAWA and the US's
first anti-trafficking legislation become law. The law
codifies VAWA for five years and authorizes $3 billion in
funds for sexual assault and domestic violence prevention,
including sexual assault prevention training for judges,
battered women's services, state-based services for victims
of domestic violence, and transitional housing for victims
of domestic violence. The sex trafficking law authorizes
$94.5 million for victims of sex trafficking, creates special
visas for victims of trafficking and slavery, and doubles
the current maximum penalty for sex trafficking. In addition,
the bill specifies that the United States withhold certain
aid from governments who fail to enforce the provisions.
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