Violent deaths of LGBT people in Brazil hits all-time high
Sam Cowie in São Paulo
@samcowie84
Mon 22 Jan 2018 02.15 EST
At least 445 LGBT Brazilians died as victims of homophobia in 2017 a 30% increase from 2016, according to LGBT watchdog group Grupo Gay de Bahia.
The victims 387 murders and 58 suicides include Dandara dos Santos, a transexual woman who was beaten to death in the north-eastern Brazil city Fortaleza in March. A video of her being beaten and kicked circulated on social media with her torturers calling her homophobic slurs.
Brazil is one of the worlds most violent countries, with a record 62,000 homicides in 2016, but authors of the research say that the deaths were directly related to homophobia.
Luiz Mott, an anthropologist and president of Grupo Gay de Bahia, said the rising violence owed much to the prominence of ultraconservative politicians, many of whom are linked to the countrys powerful evangelical caucus in congress.
More:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2018/jan/22/brazil-lgbt-violence-deaths-all-time-high-new-research