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Civil Rights Principles for Covid-19 Vaccine Development and Distribution

December 14, 2020 by South Asian Network

The Leadership Conference for Civil & Human Rights

As organizations committed to the civil and human rights of all persons in the United States, we share these principles to help guide the ongoing development and distribution of a vaccine and therapeutics for COVID-19. The impact of vaccine development and distribution on equity, economic security, health outcomes, and civil rights are critical issues facing the communities we represent. We put forward these principles to provide a framework and recommendations for civil rights and COVID-19 vaccines.

Equity must be paramount in the distribution of COVID-19 vaccines. As companies and health care entities widely distribute COVID-19 vaccines, the health and well-being of frontline and essential workers, Black, Latino, Native American, Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander communities, older adults, immigrants, people with limited English proficiency, people with disabilities, and LGBTQ individuals – the communities most affected by the virus – must be prioritized. The vaccine must be provided to individuals living and working in all types of institutional and congregate settings, including jails and prisons, immigration detention facilities, nursing homes, intermediate care facilities for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities, psychiatric hospitals, assisted living facilities, board and care homes, and homeless and domestic violence shelters. Individuals who receive home and community based services (HCBS) and individuals providing those services should also be prioritized in vaccine allocation when they are unable to effectively mitigate transmission risks.

COVID-19 vaccines must be made available to all persons, regardless of their immigration status. Information about the vaccine must also be produced and provided in the maximum possible languages and formats, including plain language and screen reader accessible formats and other alternative formats needed by people with disabilities, to ensure that as many people as possible are able to receive the information and counseling needed on how to access the vaccine. This includes ensuring that materials are developed at low literacy levels, translating documents (especially those related to costs and consent for vaccination), ensuring the availability of oral interpretation services for LEP individuals, and providing communication assistance for people with disabilities at the point of vaccination.
It will also be essential that all communities have access to the resources needed to store, handle, and administer COVID-19 vaccines. This is especially critical for rural and Native American communities which often experience critical gaps in access to health care services. The ability to access the tools needed to distribute COVID-19 vaccines must not serve as a barrier to access for vulnerable communities.

As we continue to battle the COVID-19 crisis as a nation, we must provide robust funding to support all efforts around delivering COVID-19 vaccines to communities. Investments are needed to modernize and strengthen state and local immunization infrastructure, expand the public health workforce, including hiring and training staff to distribute the vaccine, ensure rural and underserved communities have access to all the required protective equipment necessary to give the vaccine, stand up additional vaccination sites, ensure the accessibility of vaccination sites for people with disabilities and older adults, modernize immunization information systems, and support outreach and campaigns to target hard to reach populations. Cost and access to personal protective equipment (PPE) should not be a barrier to vaccine distribution.

The process of developing, testing, and approving COVID-19 vaccines must be transparent. As fears of politicization of the vaccine development process persist, it is more important than ever that all processes surrounding the development of the vaccine be transparent. The FDA must be allowed to operate independently and in the interest of people in our nation; the agency must take steps to avoid politicization and maintain the long-standing scientific integrity of its work. Additionally, there must be transparency on the part of pharmaceutical companies and government entities throughout the vaccine development process. This means providing the public with a clear and accessible understanding of what happens at every step of the process. Both efforts funded by Operation Warp Speed and those that are not, rely on underlying research paid for by taxpayers, and we deserve transparency. With the health and well-being of so many people in America at stake, we must not only get the vaccine right, but we must do so in a way that fosters trust in both the process and the outcomes. Transparency also increases trust in the vaccine development process, and will be critical in ensuring that people in America are willing to take COVID-19 vaccines. Transparency holds the government and companies accountable for fair and equitable processes. This includes making detailed demographic information including, at a minimum, race, ethnicity, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, disability, primary language, and age, available for people enrolled COVID-19 vaccine trials. This also includes ensuring transparency in state plans for distribution of COVID-19 vaccines.

Clinical trials must include representation from diverse communities in order to ensure vaccine efficacy and trust in the process. It is crucial that data about the vaccine reflect the effectiveness and potential side effects for people in all racial and ethnic groups. However, people of color and members of certain ethnic groups are consistently and significantly underrepresented in certain phases of clinical research and overrepresented in others. Despite national efforts to address the longstanding lack of representation in clinical trials, challenges persist. With limited guidance around the levels of diversity in clinical trials, it is difficult to know whether current and forthcoming COVID-19 vaccines will be equally safe and effective for all communities. As efforts continue to develop COVID-19 vaccines, it is critical that diverse populations be included in representative numbers in every stage of clinical trials and as part of future vaccine safety and monitoring efforts. In addition to the benefits around understanding efficacy, diversity in clinical trials also inspires more trust in a vaccine.
Communities must be engaged in COVID-19 vaccine distribution processes to provide education and address vaccine hesitancy in communities of color. As discussed, long-standing challenges related to historical and continued discrimination, lack of consent, and medical racism have left many communities of color distrustful of vaccines and of the health care system. Addressing vaccine hesitancy is critical to ensuring that communities of color, who have been hit hardest by the virus, are prioritized for preventive treatment. While the Tuskegee syphilis study is one of the more notorious incidents of medical abuse that cultivated mistrust of medical institutions specifically for African American communities, the history of medical and research abuse of communities of color goes far beyond that incident. The lack of trust and hesitancy that communities of color, specifically Black, Latino, Native American, Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander communities, and the disability community, experience around vaccinations is reinforced by systemic racism in our health care system and discriminatory events that continue to this day. Immigrants may also have deep distrust in government institutions due to both their own history and fear of enforcement in the United States. Given the potential for hesitancy to rapidly undermine vaccination coverage in certain communities, it is important that entities responsible for the distribution of COVID-19 vaccines immediately take steps to understand and address the extent and nature of hesitancy at a local level, on a continuing basis.

As we grapple with the realities of COVID-19 vaccine distribution, it is imperative that private and public agencies develop culturally and linguistically competent strategies to build trust and increase acceptance and demand for vaccinations, including but not limited to, targeting investments in community-based organizations, not only as partners in public education but also to ensure regular, transparent responses to concerns around the distribution and safety of the vaccine. Communication and education are key to combating hesitancy and this must include collaboration with and leadership by community partners and trusted health care providers.

Robust data collection around vaccine development and distribution must be an instrumental part of our nation’s COVID-19 response. Since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, data has been key in helping us understand how communities have been impacted by the virus and, subsequently, which communities we will need to prioritize in our response to the virus. Throughout the clinical trial phases of vaccine development, we have seen how data helps us understand which communities have been involved in clinical trials and the vetting of the vaccine, and which communities have been underrepresented during development. Now, as we enter the vaccination stage of the pandemic, data can be used to help track progress in the fight against COVID-19. As populations begin to be vaccinated, data on vaccinations should be analyzed to help us identify gaps and understand how to rectify them.

Additionally, we must ensure that data collected around COVID-19 is maintained safely and securely by the appropriate entities. No data should be collected beyond what is necessary for demographic reporting and for follow-up on additional doses, if needed. Strict standards must be developed to ensure no data collection can be used for immigration enforcement or other negative actions impacting vaccine recipients. These standards must be clear and communicated to vaccine recipients to combat vaccine hesitancy that could result from data collection. In addition, actions must be taken to restore trust in the federal government, such as repealing the public charge rules.

Once COVID-19 vaccines have been authorized or approved by the FDA, they must be free and accessible for all people. Cost or access to health care or insurance should not be a barrier to anyone seeking to get vaccinated against COVID-19. The virus has disproportionately impacted low-income individuals, including many essential workers who are more likely to be Black, Latino, Indigenous, Asian American, Native Hawaiian, or Pacific Islander. There are also already significant barriers to accessing health care for many depending on their proximity to health care services, previous experiences with health care (including discrimination, income, and insurance status), and immigration status. If people cannot afford the vaccine, highly impacted communities are less likely to achieve community immunity and face the potential of prolonged high COVID-19 infection rates. The cost of the vaccine and its administration should not be an added deterrence to inoculation, especially for communities most highly impacted by the virus. At the same time, we must ensure adequate reimbursement is available to providers for both vaccine administration and educational counseling. This reimbursement process must be equitable and available to providers treating all patients, including undocumented immigrants.

Strenuous efforts must be employed before any discussion of a vaccine mandate. Strategies to ensure widespread vaccination uptake must be rooted in the principles above. Given the distrust and vaccine hesitancy that exist, every effort must be made to ensure education with trusted messengers to promote voluntary vaccination. We should work to prevent situations where an individual may be coerced into taking the vaccine as a condition of employment. This is especially important given the lack of diversity in clinical trials and subsequent concern about how a vaccine might affect certain communities. Hinging employment and economic security on whether a person has been vaccinated may exacerbate existing economic and health disparities and every effort should be taken to avoid or to mitigate any negative, unintended consequences of a vaccine mandate.

Preparing for the future. For years, public health infrastructure in America has been underfunded and has failed to serve the most vulnerable people in our nation. The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed critical, long-standing deficiencies in our nation’s health care system. In order to meet the needs around COVID-19 vaccine development and distribution, we must ensure that our health care system is adequately financed to last for future generations. This planning goes beyond immediate funding needs, and should be forward-looking to include dedicated funding for community-based organizations, researchers, federal agencies, and state and local governments. Preparing for the future also means making changes now that help to improve health outcomes for all. This includes the need to address diversity in clinical trials in the long term to ensure that vulnerable communities are represented in every stage of the process.

This pandemic has laid bare some of the most jarring inequities in this nation. As we work to reign in the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, we must aspire toward outcomes that protect the health, well-being, and livelihood of all people in America. Every step of this effort is an opportunity to dismantle historic disparities that exist for marginalized communities within our health care system. It is critical that we seize this opportunity and work to build a health care system that works for the most vulnerable in our nation.

Signatories (as of 2/26/21):

  • The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights
  • ACCESS
  • African American Ministers In Action
  • AIDS Action Baltimore
  • AIDS Alabama
  • AIDS Foundation Chicago
  • AIDS United
  • Alianza Nacional de Campesinas
  • American Association of People with Disabilities
  • American Atheists
  • American Federation of Teachers
  • American Humanist Association
  • American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC)
  • Americans for Democratic Action (ADA)
  • Amnesty International USA
  • Andrew Goodman Foundation
  • Arkansas Coalition of Marshallese
  • Asian & Pacific Islander American Health Forum
  • Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund (AALDEF)
  • Asian Americans Advancing Justice – AAJC
  • Asian Pacific American Labor Alliance, AFL-CIO
  • Asian Pacific Islander Initiative San Diego
  • Asian Pacific Partners for Empowerment, Advocacy and Leadership (APPEAL)
  • Association of Asian Pacific Community Health Organizations (AAPCHO)
  • Association of University Centers on Disabilities (AUCD)
  • Autistic Self Advocacy Network
  • AVAC
  • Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law
  • Black Alliance for Just Immigration
  • Black Women’s Health Imperative
  • BOLD ReThink
  • Center for Disability Rights
  • Center for Law and Social Policy (CLASP)
  • Center for Public Representation
  • Center for Responsible Lending
  • Church of the Brethren, Office of Peacebuilding and Policy
  • Clearinghouse on Women’s Issues
  • Community Change Action and Fair Immigration Reform Movement (FIRM)
  • Crescent City Media Group/Center for Civic Action
  • DAP Health
  • Disability Rights Advocates
  • Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund (DREDF)
  • Empowering Pacific Islander Communities (EPIC)
  • End Citizens United / Let America Vote Action Fund
  • Equal Rights Advocates
  • Equality California
  • Fair Count
  • Fair Count Inc
  • Faith in Action
  • Faith in Public Life
  • Farmworker Justice
  • Feminist Majority Foundation
  • Fenway Health
  • Futures Without Violence
  • Government Information Watch
  • Hindu American Foundation
  • Hindu American Foundation
  • Hindu American Foundation
  • Hispanic Federation
  • Housing Choice Partners
  • Houston Immigration Legal Services Collaborative
  • Human Rights Campaign
  • Human Rights Campaign
  • Immigrant Legal Resource Center
  • Impact Fund
  • Institute for Intellectual Property and Social Justice
  • Japanese American Citizens League
  • Justice for Migrant Women
  • Justice for Migrant Women
  • Justice in Aging
  • Justice Resource Institute
  • JustUs Health
  • Ka ʻAha Lāhui O ʻOlekona Hawaiian Civic Club of Oregon and SW Washington
  • Labor Council for Latin American Advancement
  • Lambda Legal
  • Lana’i Community Health Center
  • LatinoJustice PRLDEF
  • Lawyers for Good Government (L4GG)
  • Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law
  • League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC)
  • League of Women Voters of the United States
  • Matthew Shepard Foundation
  • Matthew Shepard Foundation
  • Muslim Public Affairs Council (MPAC)
  • NAACP
  • NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF)
  • NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF)
  • NAPAFASA
  • National Association of Councils on Developmental Disabilities
  • National Association of Human Rights Workers
  • National Black Justice Coalition
  • National CAPACD
  • National Center for Parent Leadership, Advocacy, and Community Empowerment (National PLACE)
  • National Center for Transgender Equality
  • National Coalition for LGBT Health
  • National Coalition for the Homeless
  • National Council of Asian Pacific Americans
  • National Council of Churches
  • National Council of Jewish Women
  • National Council on Independent Living
  • National Disability Rights Network (NDRN)
  • National Down Syndrome Congress
  • National Education Association
  • National Employment Law Project
  • National Employment Lawyers Association
  • National Equality Action Team (NEAT)
  • National Health Law Program
  • National Hispanic Media Coalition
  • National Immigration Law Center
  • National Network for Arab American Communities
  • National Organization for Women
  • National Urban League
  • National Women’s Law Center
  • National Working Positive Coalition
  • Nebraska Appleseed
  • New York Immigration Coalition
  • North Carolina AIDS Action Network
  • Oxfam America
  • Pacific Islander Community Association of WA
  • Pacific Islands Primary Care Association
  • People For the American Way
  • People’s Action
  • Physicians for Human Rights
  • Planned Parenthood Federation of America
  • Poverty & Race Research Action Council
  • Prism Health North Texas
  • Prison Policy Initiative
  • Public Advocacy for Kids (PAK)
  • Public Citizen
  • Public Justice
  • San Francisco AIDS Foundation
  • Service Employees International Union (SEIU)
  • Silver State Equality-Nevada
  • South Asian Americans Leading Together (SAALT)
  • South Asian Network
  • South Asian Public Health Association (SAPHA)
  • Southeast Asia Resource Action Center (SEARAC)
  • Southern Echo Inc.
  • SPLC Action Fund
  • State Voices
  • Texas Progressive Action Network
  • The Arc of the United States
  • The United Methodist Church – General Board of Church and Society
  • The Workers Circle
  • Treatment Action Group
  • UFCW
  • Union for Reform Judaism
  • UNITED SIKHS
  • UTOPIA PDX – United Territories of Pacific Islanders Alliance Portland
  • Virginia Civic Engagement Table
  • Welcoming America
  • Whitman-Walker Institute
  • Workplace Fairness

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South Asian Network

southasiannetwork

Geared towards serving, supporting, uplifting, and educating Southern California's South Asian community

some posters, a lot of markers, and a room full of some posters, a lot of markers, and a room full of young people imagining safer communities together 💛

through art, reflection, and honest conversations, youth shared what safety, healing, and belonging mean to them in their own words.

turns out the future looks a lot like community care :)

#southasiannetwork #sanyouth #community #art #advocacy
Our hearts are heavy following the senseless, deva Our hearts are heavy following the senseless, devastating shooting at a mosque in San Diego during one of the holiest days leading up to Hajj and Eid al-Adha. A place of prayer and peace was turned into a site of violence, and our communities are grieving alongside all those impacted.

We stand in full solidarity with the San Diego community and all who are hurting. We urge everyone to check in on one another, hold space for care, and support those affected during this painful time.

Violence in spaces of worship is never acceptable. 

If you or someone you know needs support, SAN is here for you at 562-403-0488 or saninfo@southasiannetwork.org.
SB 995 is at risk of being quietly stalled tomorro SB 995 is at risk of being quietly stalled tomorrow, 5/14.
This bill exists because of survivors like Masuma Khan and the urgent need to stop detention systems from operating without consent or accountability. Even with strong community support, bills in the Appropriations suspense file can be delayed or quietly killed.
We can’t let that happen. Take action with us today. Call, email, share, and help us keep the pressure on.

More info + action steps at the link in our bio.

#sb995 #calltoaction #southasiannetwork #southasiancommunity
Watch as our Community Organizer speaks with ABC7 Watch as our Community Organizer speaks with ABC7 about South Asian Network’s presence at the May Day rally and our commitment to uplifting and supporting our communities.

#southasiannetwork #mayday #abc7news #southasian #nonprofitorganization
We do this work because our community deserves to We do this work because our community deserves to feel supported, cared for, and never alone❤️ For so many of us, this work is personal. It’s about giving back to the community that raised us, fighting for families who deserve better, and creating spaces where people feel safe, heard, and valued.

This Give in May, we hope you’ll support SAN and help us continue this work. Even a small donation goes a long way for our community. Thank you for always showing up for us the way we try to show up for you.

#giveinmay #donate #southasiannetwork #southasian #southasiannonprofit
If you can wait in line for chai, you can wait in If you can wait in line for chai, you can wait in line to vote 🤝

SAN in partnership with @causeusa and @lacountyrrcc is bringing a Mobile Vote Center to the community so voting feels a little more accessible, welcoming, and local! 
📍 SAN Los Angeles Office
🗓️ Sunday, May 31, 2026
⏰ 10:30 AM – 5:30 PM

Whether it’s your first time voting or you’ve been doing this for years, we’re here to help make the process accessible and welcoming for everyone 🥳

Flyer available in Bangla, Hindi, Urdu, Nepali and Punjabi! Swipe away ➡️

#voting #southasiannetwork #nonprofit #lavotes
Hate is rising across California, and our communit Hate is rising across California, and our communities are feeling it every day. The Stop the Hate program provides critical support for survivors to heal, stay safe, and rebuild their lives, but this funding is at risk.

We need action now.

Call and email your State Senator and Assemblymember by May 15 to support continued funding for Stop the Hate.

Everything you need to take action is in our bio, find your legislator and send your message today.

#southasiannetwork #stopthehate #southasiancommunity #nonprofits
SAN AT THE MAY DAY MARCH 2026 🗣️ Today we took up SAN AT THE MAY DAY MARCH 2026 🗣️

Today we took up space in the streets with thousands of others, raising our voices for workers’ dignity, justice, and power. ✊🏽

South Asian Network was proud to march alongside fellow organizations, friends, and community members in solidarity with workers across movements. From powerful speeches to the sound of dhol echoing through the crowd, the energy was loud, joyful, and unstoppable. 

Grateful to be part of collective action that reminds us change is built together, in every step, every voice, and every presence.

#southasiannetwork #mayday #southasiansunite #southasiannonprofit #southasian
“Good morning everyone…” Today, that voice carried “Good morning everyone…”
Today, that voice carried through the streets as we marched for workers everywhere. As South Asian Network, along with fellow organizations and friends, we are proud to stand in moments like this, grounded in solidarity, resistance, and care.

We showed up with rhythm and truth, uplifting Punjabi truck drivers and all South Asian workers, who keep this country moving, even as they are pushed to the margins.

Huge shoutout to our dhol players who brought the rhythm and joy, filling the streets with energy and spirit. 🥁

We are grateful to be part of movements that remind us immigrants are not just labor, we are community, culture, and power.

When we come together across all our differences, we are unstoppable.

The people united will never be divided. ✊🏽🧡

#southasiannetwork #mayday2026 #southasiansunite #southasiannonprofit #southasianvoices
Give in May is here. This month, we are coming to Give in May is here.

This month, we are coming together to care for our community in real, tangible ways. At South Asian Network, we see every day how access to culturally rooted, multilingual support can make a meaningful difference in people’s lives.

Our goal is $25,000 to continue providing health access, public benefits support, and crisis services for individuals and families who need us most.

If you’re able, please consider giving. And just as importantly, please share this with your friends and family so this circle of care can grow.

Every act of support matters more than you know.

#southasiannetwork #giveinmay #donatenow #southasiancommunity
This May Day, South Asian Network is proud to stan This May Day, South Asian Network is proud to stand in solidarity with workers across movements and communities.✊🏽 

Join our contingent on May 1, 2026 as we march for dignity, justice, and workers’ rights.
Find us by the sound, our contingent will be accompanied throughout the march by dhol player Jup G (@jupgonthebeat 

📞 Questions or need help connecting with us? Call our main line: 562-403-0488

#mayday #southasiannetwork #workersrights #southasianvoices
Denim Day is more than wearing jeans, it’s a stand Denim Day is more than wearing jeans, it’s a stand against victim-blaming and a reminder that consent matters, always. 💙

This day began after a court ruling suggested what someone wore could imply consent. We wear denim to challenge that harm, stand with survivors, and push for accountability and change.

If you or someone you know needs support, you’re not alone. Reach out to local resources, hotlines, or trusted community spaces for care and guidance.

📞 211 – local resources & referrals
📞 National Domestic Violence Hotline: 1-800-799-7233 (or text BEGIN to 88788)
📞 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline: call/text 988

#denimday #southasiannetwork #sexualassaultawarenessmonth #southasian
In many South Asian homes, nothing goes to waste, In many South Asian homes, nothing goes to waste, fruit peels, chai leaves, and leftovers are all part of a cycle of care!! 

Composting is just an extension of that wisdom. It’s a simple way to reduce waste and give back to the earth.

Getting started:
🥕 Separate your food scraps
🌱 Use your green bin (check local guidelines)
🍂 Add cardboard or yard waste to keep things balanced. Small habits at home can make a real difference for our communities and future generations.
Learn more: recyclingreimaginedca.com

#southasiannetwork #southasiansustainability #compost #recycle #zerowastetips
Sexual violence impacts people of all genders, age Sexual violence impacts people of all genders, ages, and communities, yet many survivors carry their experiences in silence. The effects can be emotional, mental, and physical, often lasting long after the incident itself.

For many survivors, especially within South Asian communities, stigma, shame, and cultural pressures can make it even harder to speak out or seek support. Conversations about sexual violence are often avoided, leaving survivors to navigate trauma alone.

By educating ourselves, challenging harmful myths, and creating spaces rooted in compassion and accountability, we can help break that silence. Supporting survivors starts with listening, believing, and respecting their experiences.

If you or someone you know needs support, resources and community organizations are available. Healing is possible, and no one should have to go through it alone.

#southasiannetwork #sexualassaultawareness #sexualassaultawarenessmonth #genderbasedviolence #southasian
Across South Asia, many communities are celebratin Across South Asia, many communities are celebrating the arrival of spring and the beginning of a new year. 🌸🌾 From Baisakhi and Naya Barsha to Pohela Boishakh, Puthandu, Vishu, Bihu, Ugadi, Gudi Padwa, Navreh, Cheti Chand, and Aluth Avurudu, this season marks renewal, harvest, and fresh beginnings.

South Asian Network celebrates the rich diversity of traditions in our communities and wishes everyone celebrating a joyful and prosperous new year! 

Did we miss a celebration? Let us know in the comments ❤️
We’re proud to join over 40 AANHPI partner organiz We’re proud to join over 40 AANHPI partner organizations in uplifting this important community conversation.

Join us for the AANHPI California Gubernatorial Forum on Saturday, April 18th from 10:00 AM–12:00 PM at World Mission University. This nonpartisan forum creates a meaningful space for California’s gubernatorial candidates to engage directly with AANHPI communities and address the issues that matter most to our families, health, safety, and future.

📍 World Mission University
🗓 Saturday, April 18
⏰ 10:00 AM – 12:00 PM

RSVP at the link in bio / QR code on flyer.

#southasiannetwork #SAN #AANHPI #southasiancommunity #gubernatorialforum
Our Executive Director Shakeel Syed, joined partne Our Executive Director Shakeel Syed, joined partners, advocates, and community leaders in Washington, D.C. at the Supreme Court to defend birthright citizenship and the 14th Amendment.

A special thank you to @saajco for organizing and bringing advocates together for this important moment.
Organizational Statement on Gender Based Violence, Organizational Statement on Gender Based Violence, Accountability, and Community Care.
SAN on the ground at Capitol Hill. Our Executive SAN on the ground at Capitol Hill.

Our Executive Director Shakeel Syed and Deputy Director Hina Ahmad are joining partners from across the South Asian Coalition to elevate the urgent issues impacting our communities from immigration and labor rights to community safety.

Spaces like this are more than briefings, they are opportunities to challenge harmful narratives, advocate for just policies, and build power across movements.
Grateful to stand in community with organizers, advocates, and leaders committed to dignity, equity, and justice for all. 

#southasiancoalition #capitolhill #immigrantjustice #communitypower #southasiannetwork
South Asian Immigration Briefing with Congressiona South Asian Immigration Briefing with Congressional Official Jayapal & Meng by ASATA Power and the South Asian Coalition
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18173 Pioneer Blvd., Suite “I”, Artesia, CA 90701
Phone: 562-403-0488 • E-mail: saninfo@southasiannetwork.org
Office Hours: 9 am to 5:30 pm, Monday to Friday.


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