“It is an appeal that we are making to finally have an overview of the situation in Switzerland,” says Muriel Waeger, head of LOS (Organisation suisse des lesbiennes), in Lausanne.
Members of the homosexual, bisexual, transsexual, transgender or intersex (LGBTI) community are more likely to be the targets of hate crimes related to their sexual orientation, adds Waeger, citing international studies. “If we want to do prevention, we need figures on which to base ourselves.”
In thirteen cantons, including Geneva, Vaud, Bern, Zurich and Ticino, motions will be presented calling on the police to keep accurate statistics on this phenomenon. Police officers should also receive appropriate training so that they can help victims.
According to Waeger, the consequences of these hate crimes can be dramatic. “The suicide rate is two to five times higher among young people in these communities than among the rest of the population,” she said.
At the federal level, Swiss politician Rosmarie Quadranti of the centre-right Conservative Democratic Party submitted a motion in 2017 to request a national census of crimes based on sexual orientation or gender identity.
The Federal Council (executive body) does not support this issue, but the proposal has yet to be examined by parliament.
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Samuel* struggled for years with not being able to buy things in a shop, see a doctor or get social services because of the stigma attached to homosexuality in Tanzania. But when his boyfriend was arrested, he realised he needed to leave his home country for good. He paid someone to get him to Europe,…
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“Various studies in the United States show there are no differences in the sexual orientation, construction of identity or social representation of children raised by two people of the same sex,” says Nicolas Favez, a psychology professor at Geneva University. “However, most researchers are limited to those children who are born into a straight family…
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