Governor Inslee’s Statements Addressing Anti-Asian Violence

As
Gov. Jay Inslee shared in a recent statement, “The tragedy that unfolded
in Georgia was another escalation in the disturbing trend of anti-Asian
violence in this country. These shootings reflect hate against Asians, against
women, and against immigrants. We all have a role in denouncing hatred wherever
it reveals itself. We stand in solidarity with all those impacted,
including our Asian community members who are suffering in the rise of anti-Asian
hate crimes. All leaders, past and present, should condemn these acts for what
they are and commit to a more open dialogue about how this happened and how we
can do better by our Asian American communities.” 
(The complete statement
is available here
).

Before the murder of six Asian women
in Georgia, Inslee shared a statement speaking to the increased violence and
racism facing the Asian community in Washington state.

“Washington is a place where all people should feel safe and
included. This is a welcoming state and I have a zero-tolerance policy for hate
and racism. We must all condemn the acts of hate and violence displayed in the
rising incidence of anti-Asian hate crimes in both Washington state and across
the country. This is wholly unacceptable and must not stand.”

 “We saw this ugly trend surge a year ago, when COVID-19
first emerged in our state. One year later, we have a vaccine for the virus –
but racism is still running rampant. “

 “Victims deserve support and justice. There are systems in
place to ensure offenders face consequences for their unconscionable actions. I
encourage victims to come forward and report their experience to local law
enforcement.”

 “I stand in solidarity with members of the Asian community
who continue to experience fear and intimidation. They deserve better, and we
must do everything in our power to make their safety and security a priority
and to eliminate racism in Washington.”

OCVA shares Governor Inslee’s words
to help elevate the calls to action and express our solidarity.

Our office will:

• Continue to help all OCVA grantees
identify how OCVA funds can be used to engage in anti-racism work actively.

• Identify resources and provide
support to victim service providers by and for the AAPI community.

• Identify resources and provide
support to victim service providers by and for immigrant communities.

• Identify resources and provide
support to victim service providers by and for sex worker communities.

• Review service data to identify
underserved and unserved communities and work with victim service providers and
coalitions to address these gaps.

Please review these additional
resources: