Brazil now joins a growing number of countries in the typically conservative and Catholic-influenced Latin American region that have passed measures in favour of LGBT rights.
Business
Standard
: Brazil's Supreme Court voted Thursday to criminalise homophobia, an
important step for sexual minorities in one of the most dangerous
countries for LGBT
people in the world.
The
Supreme Federal Court (STF), which voted eight to three in favour of
the measure, classified homophobia as a crime similar to racism,
until Congress -- which is held by a conservative majority and is
strongly influenced by evangelical churches -- passes a law
specifically addressing such discrimination.
Brazil
now joins a growing number of countries in the typically conservative
and Catholic-influenced Latin American region that have passed
measures in favour of LGBT rights.
"All
prejudice is violence. All discrimination is a cause of suffering,"
said judge Carmen Luzia while voting in favour of the measure.
"But
I learned that some prejudices cause more suffering than others."
According to the NGO Grupo Gay de Bahia, which has collected national
statistics for the past four decades, there were 387 murders and 58
suicides over "homotransphobia" in 2017, a 30 percent
increase from 2016.
This
works out to one LGBT death by suicide or murder every 19 hours in
Brazil.
The
country's highest court considered it neglect of legislative power
not to have outlawed such discrimination until now. But the three
judges that voted against the measure insisted that criminalizing
homophobia was Congress's job, not the court's.
"Only
Congress can approve (the definition of) crimes and penalties; only
Congress can pass laws on criminal conduct," said judge Ricardo
Lewandowski.
Acts
of racism, and now acts of "homotransphobia," in Brazil
face one to three years in prison or a fine.
The
STF's decision has caused tension within Congress, with some
legislators feeling stripped of their powers.
With
a large group defending their interest in Congress, the Pentecostal
churches -- whose following has grown exponentially in
Brazil,
the country with the most Catholics in the world -- are expected to
try to slow down initiatives such as that passed by the STF.
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