Claudia Dayanara Spellman Sosa (born in Honduras in the 20th century) is a Honduran LGBT and transgender activist. For her efforts as a human rights defender, Time magazine named her as one of the hundred most influential people of 2021.
According to reports by the global LGBTIQ organization OutRight Action International, on May 26, 2007, Claudia Spellmant was stopped by a police patrol in San Pedro Sulas on her way to a concert and asked to get into the police vehicle for no reason. When she refused, she was detained and taken to the police station. Half an hour later, seven other women, three of them trans people, were physically, verbally and psychologically abused by the police officers. Colonel Sandoval, the municipal police chief, gave orders to beat one of the arrested trans women. The reason he gave was that she had defied his order to avoid certain public areas in the city that were only for so-called normal and decent people. [1] [2]
Because of violence against trans people, Claudia Spellmant fled Honduras in 2013 and now lives in New York. [3] [4] She works as a model.[ citation needed ]
Claudia Spellmant belongs to the transperson organization Colectivo Travesti of San Pedro Sula and is a member of the network Redlactrans, which represents organizations of transpersons in Latin America and the Caribbean. [1] [5] This advocates for the visibility of trans people and an improvement in their legal situation. Spellmant founded the trans collective Colectivo Unidad Color Rossa. [6]
Together with the human rights organization Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights, the lesbian network Cattrachas founded by Indyra Mendoza brought the case of trans person and activist for trans women Vicky Hernández before the Inter-American Court of Human Rights in Costa Rica. [7] They represented the family of the slain and sued the Honduran government. In 2009, Hernández had been brutally murdered in San Pedro Sula at the age of 26. This was part of a series of murders of trans individuals that followed a June coup that ousted President José Manuel Zelaya. [8] [9]
From its hearing location in San José, Costa Rica, the court called other transpersons to the stand by virtual means. Among them was Claudia Spellmant, who had been friends with Vicky Hernández. [10] Hernández regularly visited Spellmant's Colectivo Unidad Color Rossa- office in San Pedro Sula. Initially, Hernández only procured condoms and attended security training there, but later she became an active member of the collective. [11] Authorities proved Hernández was infected with HIV and subsequently did not perform an autopsy, so the circumstances of her death could not be fully determined. Spellmant testified that Hernández's body showed no signs of autopsy, but had been shot in the head. The witness expressed the belief that Hernández died because she was an HIV-infected transperson. [2]
Spellmant testified in 2020 that in Honduras, systematic discrimination pushed trans people into prostitution. [12] Most trans people who remained in that state would die. [2]
The court in June 2021 ordered the Honduran government to continue investigating the case and to initiate legislation to protect LGBT persons. Among other things, it said, trans people should be allowed to officially change their gender identity. In addition, the court ordered the government to pay $30,000 in damages to the family of Vicky Hernández. [9] In addition, the Honduran government would have to create a scholarship for trans women named after Vicky Hernández. [9] Also, an anti-discrimination program must be created for security agencies, and a state registry of violent acts against LGBT people must be created. [13] Honduras has announced it will comply with the ruling. [9]
Claudia Spellmant and her peers thus achieved for the first time a landmark court ruling on the question of whether governments in the region had done enough to protect trans people so far. [9] This ruling is considered a legal "milestone" for Latin America and the Caribbean. [8]
Honduras is one of the most dangerous countries for people in the LGBTIQ community. More than 389 murders of LGBTIQ people have been recorded since August 2009 (as of August 2021). Only 89 of the cases have been prosecuted and 90 percent of the acts go unpunished. Due to the widespread impunity of these crimes against people of the LGBTIQ community, numerous organizations formed to create shelters, record the acts of violence, and disseminate them in the international media. [14] According to observations by the Rainbow Association, an average of one LGBTI person is killed every 11 days in Honduras. That's about 33 per year. [15]
Politics of Honduras takes place in a framework of a multi-party system presidential representative democratic republic. The President of Honduras is both head of state and head of government. Executive power is exercised by the government. Legislative power is vested in the National Congress of Honduras. The party system is dominated by the conservative National Party of Honduras, the Liberal Party of Honduras, and Liberty and Refoundation.
San Pedro Sula is the capital of Cortés Department, Honduras. It is located in the northwest corner of the country in the Sula Valley, about 50 kilometers south of Puerto Cortés on the Caribbean Sea. With a population of 701,200 in the central urban area and a population of 1,445,598 in its metropolitan area in 2023, it is the nation's primary industrial center and second largest city after the capital Tegucigalpa, and the largest city in Central America that is not a capital city.
The 1991–92 Honduran Liga Nacional season was the 26th edition of the Honduran Liga Nacional. The format of the tournament remained the same as the previous season. C.D. Motagua won the title after defeating Real C.D. España in the finals. Both teams qualified to the 1992 CONCACAF Champions' Cup.
Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people in Honduras face legal challenges not experienced by non-LGBT residents. Both male and female types of same-sex sexual activity are legal in Honduras.
Rosanna Flamer-Caldera is a Sri Lankan LGBTIQ rights activist. She is the founder and executive director of EQUAL GROUND, the oldest LGBTIQ advocacy organisation pursuing LGBTIQ rights as part of the larger Human Rights framework in Sri Lanka. She was also the co-founder of the Women’s Support Group in 1999. Rosanna served as the first Sri Lankan Female Asia Representative (2001-2003) and then Co-Secretary General of the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Intersex Association (ILGA) (2003-2008). She is the co-founder and former Chair of the Commonwealth Equality Network (2015-2022), a broad network of LGBTIQ organisations within the Commonwealth. In September 2021, she spearheaded the first of its kind legal case in the Sri Lanka Court of Appeals, against homophobic, discriminatory and inflammatory speeches made by police trainers in Sri Lanka. The police issued an island wide circular to all police stations in the country that stated that LGBTIQ persons could not be arrested or harassed for being who they are. Through her guidance, in 2015 EQUAL GROUND commenced Diversity Equity and Inclusion programs within the corporate sector and to date has sensitised over 45000 staff members of over 50 companies in Sri Lanka. In 2017 she received the Zonta award for Social Impact and in November 2022, she received the APCOM Community Hero award for her work for the LGBTIQ community in Sri Lanka.
Laws governing lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) rights are complex and diverse in the Americas, and acceptance of LGBT persons varies widely.
The term travesti is used in Latin America to designate people who were assigned male at birth and develop a feminine gender identity. Other terms have been invented and are used in South America in an attempt to further distinguish it from cross-dressing, drag, and pathologizing connotations. In Spain, the term was used in a similar way during the Franco era, but it was replaced with the advent of the medical model of transsexuality in the late 1980s and early 1990s, in order to rule out negative stereotypes. The arrival of these concepts occurred later in Latin America than in Europe, so the concept of travesti lasted, with various connotations.
The transgender rights movement is a movement to promote the legal status of transgender people and to eliminate discrimination and violence against transgender people regarding housing, employment, public accommodations, education, and health care. A major goal of transgender activism is to allow changes to identification documents to conform with a person's current gender identity without the need for gender-affirming surgery or any medical requirements, which is known as gender self-identification. It is part of the broader LGBT rights movements.
Serious issues involving human rights in Honduras through the end of 2013 include unlawful and arbitrary killings by police and others, corruption and institutional weakness of the justice system, and harsh and at times life-threatening prison conditions.
Crime in Honduras has become a growing matter of concern for the Honduran population in recent years. Honduras has experienced alarmingly high levels of violence and criminal activity, with homicide rates reaching a peak in 2012, averaging 20 homicides per day. Corruption, extortion, coercion, and drug smuggling also run rampant throughout Honduran society, preventing the nation from building trustworthy authorities like police, and severely limiting economic, social, or political progress. The situation has prompted international organizations and governments to offer assistance in combating crime in Honduras.
Transgender and travesti rights in Argentina have been lauded by many as some of the world's most progressive. The country "has one of the world's most comprehensive transgender rights laws": its Gender Identity Law, passed in 2012, made Argentina the "only country that allows people to change their gender identities without facing barriers such as hormone therapy, surgery or psychiatric diagnosis that labels them as having an abnormality". In 2015, the World Health Organization cited Argentina as an exemplary country for providing transgender rights. Leading transgender activists include Lohana Berkins, Diana Sacayán, Mariela Muñoz, María Belén Correa, Marlene Wayar, Claudia Pía Baudracco, Susy Shock and Lara Bertolini.
Amancay Diana Sacayán was an Argentinian LGBT and human rights activist who fought for the legal rights of transvestites and transgender people in Argentina.
LGBT in Argentina refers to the diversity of practices, militancies and cultural assessments on sexual diversity that were historically deployed in the territory that is currently the Argentine Republic. It is particularly difficult to find information on the incidence of homosexuality in societies from Hispanic America as a result of the anti-homosexual taboo derived from Christian morality, so most of the historical sources of its existence are found in acts of repression and punishment. One of the main conflicts encountered by LGBT history researchers is the use of modern concepts that were non-existent to people from the past, such as "homosexual", "transgender" and "travesti", falling into an anachronism. Non-heterosexuality was historically characterized as a public enemy: when power was exercised by the Catholic Church, it was regarded as a sin; during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, when it was in the hands of positivist thought, it was viewed as a disease; and later, with the advent of civil society, it became a crime.
Events of 2020 in Honduras.
Events of 2021 in Honduras.
The San Pedro Sula Honduras Temple is a temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints under construction in San Pedro Sula, Honduras.
The Honduran gang crackdown, referred to in Honduras as the Régimen de Excepción, began in December 2022 after parts of the constitution were suspended to fight criminal gangs in the country.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)[ permanent dead link ]