Brown was arrested on February 8 under suspicion of making criminal threats, following his alleged assault of a woman, believed to be his partner, singer Robin Rihanna Fenty (aka Rihanna).
Police photos of Rihannas face, heavily bruised and scratched, were leaked to the media on February 19.
Brown released a statement on February 15 expressing his regret about the incident, and has since been dropped from a number of promotional campaigns.
Brown has now been charged with assault likely to cause bodily injury and making criminal threats.
Resistance unequivocally condemns all domestic violence, and calls on Australian radio stations to cease playing Browns music in condemnation of domestic violence, and in support of women who have suffered it.
Regardless of Browns popularity as an artist, it is unacceptable for radio stations to give airtime to someone who beats women.
We need to send a message that this kind of behaviour shows a deep-seated lack of respect for women. Further, by taking a public stand against domestic violence, radio stations would be helping to counter the social stigma around this issue, which contributes to the false idea that domestic violence is a private matter.
Browns assault shows that domestic violence remains an insidious and insistent social problem. Our society is still divided along gender lines under capitalism, women still occupy an inferior social status.
According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics
National Crime and Safety Surveys in 2005 available at
<http://www.abs.gov.au>, an estimated 44,100 adults were victims of at least one sexual assault in the 12 months prior to the survey.
Rihannas experience is not an isolated case young women suffer from a higher rate of violence and the majority of women know their attackers.
The decline of the womens liberation movement since it speak in the 1970s means that unhealthy attitudes to women and violence often go unchallenged.
The 2008
Sexual Harassment report by the Sex Discrimination Office found that one in five women who reported they had not experienced sexual harassment went on to describe behaviour they had experienced that did in fact constitute harassment.
In short, violence against women is a symptom of a system that oppresses women. Resistance is committed to challenging violence against women, alongside fighting for a socialist transformation of our society that places womens liberation at the forefront.
Women have the right to safety, independence and dignity in their lives and relationships, and the right to freedom from sexist harassment and discrimination.
Rather than feeling like victims, women can live without violence. Its up to men, not just women, to ensure that these rights, and ultimately, full equality, are achieved, and to challenge violence and sexist ideas wherever they emerge. The safety of women depends on it.