Zuko Komisa

Brazil’s Supreme Court rules that homophobia is now punishable by prison.
The Brazil’s Supreme Court ruled on Tuesday, August 22, that homophobia will now be punishable by imprisonment.
The decision has been positively hailed by the LGBTQ+ community, which has been struggling with widespread violence in the nation.
Giving LGBTQ+ people equal legal protection was deemed to be a “constitutional imperative” by Justice Edson Fachin, the case’s lead judge.
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According to the to the Guardian, Brazil witnessed 387 murders and 58 suicides attributed to “homotransphobia” in 2017 alone, marking a 30% increase from 2016.
They also revealed that atleast one member of the LGBTQ+ community died every 19 hours in Brazil.
“The 9-1 decision came in the wake of rising violence against the LGBTQ+ community, with Justice Edson Fachin, the lead judge on the case, declaring that it was driven by a “constitutional imperative” to grant the country’s queer population equal protection under the law.”
In 2019, the court had decided that homophobia was illegal, just as racism.
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