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This impunity brings about new crimes.”Ĭontact Samaritans for free from any telephone on 116 123. “The police – for reasons of homophobia or structural incapacity – don’t investigate every murder. “A serious problem in relation to homophobic and transphobic crimes is impunity,” he said. Perpetrators of hate crimes often go unpunished, added Mott. Mott said that attackers sometimes kill and then mutilate victims, including cutting off their genitals. Prof Luiz Mott, a gay rights activist and founder of Grupo Gay da Bahia, cited the case of 17-year-old Wesner Oliveira who died after attackers pushed a compressed air hose from a car wash inside him. There have been other homophobic attacks in the country where objects have been used on the victim. “It seems that the population feels it has a right to commit these violent acts against the LGBT population, influenced by Bolsonaro.” “We have a president who compounded this violence,” said Ávila. President Jair Bolsonaro has a long history of LGBT-phobic and misogynistic comments, including saying that he is a “proud homophobe”. Hernandes, along with Ávila, attributes this rise in violence partly to the attitude of the leadership in Brazil. Data from the government’s hotline to report abuses, revealed that between 20, there were 12,477 complaints of violence against LGBT people in Brazil. The national Human Rights Ombudsman’s Office reported to Human Rights Watch that, between January and June 2020, it received 1,134 complaints of violence, discrimination and other abuses against LGBT people. In 2020, 237 LGBT people died in situations of violence there were 224 murders and 13 suicides, according to Grupo Gay da Bahia, the oldest LGBT rights organisation in Latin America. Hate speech ends up propagating violence.”
We are a very conservative country where there is still a lot of prejudice. “Brazil is the world champion of LGBT murders. “Violence against LGBT people in Brazil has grown a lot recently,” said Margareth Hernandes, a lawyer based in Florianópolis and president of the gender law commission.
Cristian González Cabrera, a researcher at Human Rights Watch, said that while the supreme court banned violence and discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity in 2019, “the government needs to take urgent further steps to stave off this epidemic of violence against LGBT people”. “It’s absurd to justify violence that is brutal and barbaric,” she said.īrazil has one of the most alarming rates of violence and discrimination against LGBT people in the world. She said opinion had been divided, with some people shocked by the case while others justified it, saying the man was gay. Ávila is supporting the family of the victim, and added that news of the attack, which came to light during pride month, had provoked a huge nationwide reaction. “This is a frightening crime but it’s very common in Brazil, and violence – not only against lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people but also women, black people and immigrants – is worsening,” said Lirous Ávila, president of the Association in Defence of Human Rights, an organisation that helps victims of violence in Florianópolis. Verdi Furlanetto, chief of police, confirmed to the Guardian that his force is investigating but there have been no arrests as yet. His attackers left him in the street where he was found and taken to hospital.