Gay rights activists up in arms against hate crime
His hands and feet bound and his body riddled with stab wounds, Palanca award-winning writer Winton Ynion was found dead in his Quezon City condominium unit two years ago. He was homosexual. While authorities initially suspected robbery as the motive for the crime, Ynionâs friends believed otherwise. The writerâs case is only one in the rising number of deaths that lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) groups believe have been motivated by gender discrimination. It was the death of Ynion and of many others that prompted several LGBT rights groups â including Ladlad, ProGay, and Queer Pagan Network â to march to the Commission on Human Rights (CHR) in Quezon City on Tuesday to present a list of 56 homosexuals whose deaths remain unsolved. The march coincided with the International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia (IDAHO), which commemorates the day the World Health Organization took homosexuality off the International Classification of Diseases. Hate crime watch Up until 2009, no authoritative list of suspected hate crimes in the country existed although they were happening everywhere. That same year, LGBT group leader Marlon Lacsamana lost two of his gay friends, one of whom was Ynion, to crimes which he believed were triggered by hate. â[Then we started thinking], âano ba ang dapat naming gawin?â Hindi naman 'ata tama na namamatay mga kaibigan natin tapos wala tayong ginagawa," Lacsamana said. Lacsamana, who is a librarian by profession, then began combing through the news archives of local papers and slowly, the list grew to what would become the Philippine LGBT Hate Crime Watch. Some of the cases, Lacsamana explained, are left unresolved because the families themselves requested to stop the investigation once it dabbled on the victimâs homosexuality â maybe because of the stigma attached to the issue, he added. The lack of legislation on the persecution against hate crimes doesnât help either, he said. Lacsamana said many of the victims are unidentified as such, trivializing the cases. He recalled getting in an argument with someone online because the death of one particular gay individual. The commenter insisted that the crime wasnât motivated by hate but was a robbery gone wrong. âOo nga, may robbery nga but ang isang robbery ba kailangan ng 72 stab wounds sa tao? Robbery pa ba matatawag dun?" he said. Itâs this misunderstanding of hate crimes and homosexuality that the groups want to correct, said Ladlad chairperson Bemz Benedito. âSana mas pagtuunan ng pansin ang mga cases na ito," she said. The process for Lacsamana hasnât been that easy. He acknowledges that the list, which tracks cases from as far back as 1996, is not as comprehensive as he would like it to be. Lacsamana said the list depends on secondary sources of information â crime investigators, media reports and the accounts of witnesses or friends. The group hopes to eventually find funding to make their research more thorough and for other organizations to give their own list of possible hate crimes. Currently, the group uses the social network Facebook to call attention to their cause. Anti-discrimination, equality Hate crimes, Ladladâs Benedito explained, arenât limited to those that end in gruesome murders. For Benedito, discrimination against LGBTs is also harrowing, and it happens every day. âIt occurs like a natural thing," she added. Some malls for instance, ban transsexuals from entering the premises because of their âinappropriate" attire. âHindi nila naiintindihan na mga transsexuals kami, na iyon ang aming gender identity," she said. Whatâs worse, some members are denied employment once they reveal their homosexuality, according to Benedito. She said it is this âirrational fear and hatred" for their community that strengthens his groupâs belief in LGBTsâ need for laws to protect their rights. Several bills which seek to criminalize discrimination against LGBT have been filed in both the Senate and the House of Representatives. However, none of them have been passed. In 2008, then Akbayan representative Lisa Hontiveros called for the passage of a house bill that protects homosexuals from discrimination. Bayan Muna representative Teddy Casiño, meanwhile, authored two bills that cater to the LGTB community â to recognize May 17 as The National Day Against Homophobia And Transphobia and House Bill 4635 or the Anti-Discrimination Act of 2010. The second bill had since been passed on to the House of Representativesâ Committee on Justice but no further development has been reported. Despite these advances in legislation, Benedito insisted that LGBTs deserve representation in the legislative branch. Last year, Ladlad made headlines when the Commission on Elections (Comelec) denied them accreditation as a party-list group. A month before the 2010 National Elections, the Supreme Court (SC) granted the groupâs petition to overturn the Comelec resolutions which denied Ladlad of accreditation. According to the SCâs decision, the group had complied with the legal requirements of party-list accreditation as listed in Republic Act 7941 or the Party-list System Act. The party-list however, failed to secure seats during last yearâs elections, which is why the 2013 elections present a do-or-die scenario. Benedito said that if they fail to win three seats in 2013, the group will lose accreditation as a party-list. âWe donât want to go through what we went through the last time," she said, referring to Comelecâs decision. A long way to go Both Benedito and Lacsamana admit that there is a lot that needs to be done for the LGBT community. Karen Gomez Dumpit of the CHRâs Government Cooperation Office said that they will look into the cases in the Hate Crime Watch list and that they will coordinate with the LGBT groups on the matter. âWeâre one with them in line with the advocacy that these are human rights theyâre asking for. No one has the right to kill anybody because of their gender or sexual orientation," she said. Lacsamana meanwhile called on the authorities to do their job properly and to take hate crimes âfor what they are." He said that in many cases, when the homosexual angle is unearthed, the investigation turns awry. âAno ba kami, half-human? Hustisya pa rin, eh," he said. âThe bottom line here is misunderstanding â because they donât know us, they donât understand us, they donât want to know us," he said. âWe have to do something as a community. We have to fight." â PE/VS, GMA News