Trans Murder Monitoring Project 2015 Report
Reposted: March 31st, 2016
30th March 2016: Trans Day of Visibility Press Release
Over 2,000 trans people killed in the last 8 years
On occasion of the International Transgender
Day of Visibility (TDoV) [1] held on the 31st of March every year,
Transgender Europe (TGEU) is publishing the Trans Murder Monitoring
(TMM) project [2] update to join the voices raising awareness on this
day about the multiple forms of discrimination faced by trans and gender
diverse people worldwide.
This update (TMM TDoV 2016) reveals 2,016
reported killings of trans and gender diverse people in 65 countries
worldwide between the 1st of January 2008 and the 31st of December 2015,
more than 1,500 of which were reported in Central and South America.
Further analysis of this data shows that 65% of all murdered trans and
gender diverse people whose profession was known were sex workers. [3]
Throughout all six world regions, the highest
absolute numbers have been found in countries with strong trans
movements and civil society organisations that carry out forms of
professional monitoring: Brazil (802), Mexico (229), Colombia (105),
Venezuela (98), and Honduras (79) in Central and South America; the
United States (132) in North America; Turkey (41) and Italy (33) in
Europe; and India (54), the Philippines (40) and Pakistan (34) in Asia.
[4]
The close connection between the existence of strong
trans movements and professional monitoring on the one hand, and the
highest absolute numbers of reports, on the other hand, point to the
worrisome question of unreported cases.
TGEU’s Senior Researcher, Carsten Balzer/Carla LaGata, explains, “Beside
the need for mechanisms to protect trans and gender diverse people,
this connection also shows the need for trans and gender diverse
organisations capable of professional monitoring and reporting of
violence against their communities. This connection results in the fact
that the figures show only the tip of the iceberg of homicides of trans
and gender diverse people on a worldwide scale.”
While Brazil, Mexico, and the United States have the
highest absolute numbers, the relative numbers show even more alarming
results for some countries with smaller population sizes. Honduras, for
instance, has a rate of 9.56 reported trans and gender diverse people
killings per million inhabitants. [5]
It is important to note that these cases are those
that could be found through Internet search and cooperation with trans
organisations and activists. In most countries, data on murdered trans
and gender diverse people are not systematically produced, and it is
impossible to estimate the numbers of unreported cases.
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