We live during a time where people are more able to be themselves. People can dye their hair hot pink or get weird face tattoos. While most people won't understand why they do these things, the usual reaction is to stare and then go on with your day. What about the people who are apart of the transgender community? Their lifestyle isn't as accepted as a dye job or a tattoo. They get more than just a weird look. People of the transgender community are dying at a rapid rate to the hands of violence. People don't understand their life choices or decisions. Read this story about the transgender pageant winner who was murdered in South Africa.
Thapelo Makutle, 23, had argued late Friday night with two men about his sexuality, his friend, Shaine Griqua told mambaonline.com. Those two men followed him home, broke down his door and killed him, Griqua said.
Makutle,
known as Queen Bling, was active in the LGBT community in the Kuruman
region, a rural area in the north, Griqua told mambaonline.com. He said
his friend identified as gay and recently started calling himself
transgender.
"It's so sad. I can't describe the pain that we are feeling right
now," Griqua told mambaonline. "We have lost a young, talented, gay man
who was open about who he was. The last few days have been like a dark
cloud."
Griqua, the director of Legbo Northern Cape, a nonprofit
that provides sexual health education, released a statement saying that
witnesses had seen Thapelo’s body, and that his genitalia had been
“severed and inserted into his mouth.” There was no sign of burglary, Griqua said, according to globalpost.com.
Police have not arrested anyone in the case, according to media reports.
South
Africa has long been lauded for its liberal positions on gay rights.
The country was the first to ban discrimination based on sexual
orientation in its constitution, and same-sex marriage became legal in
2006.
But a Human Rights Watch report from 2011
found that black lesbians and transgender men in rural areas of South
Africa face “extensive discrimination and violence in their daily lives,
both from private individuals and government officials.”
Nearly
all 120 people interviewed by Human Rights Watch said they lived in fear
of sexual assault and that they were reluctant to approach police for
protection.
Source
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