29/23 Discrimination and violence against individuals based on their sexual orientation and gender identity - Report of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
Document Type: Final Report
Date: 2015 May
Session: 29th Regular Session (2015 Jun)
Agenda Item:
GE.15-08842 (E)
Human Rights Council Twenty-ninth session Agenda items 2 and 8
Annual report of the United Nations High Commissioner
for Human Rights and reports of the Office of the
High Commissioner and the Secretary-General
Follow-up to and implementation of the Vienna
Declaration and Programme of Action
Discrimination and violence against individuals based on their sexual orientation and gender identity
Report of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for
Human Rights
Summary
The present report is submitted to the Human Rights Council pursuant to its
resolution 27/32, in which the Council requested the United Nations High Commissioner
for Human Rights to update the report of the Office of the High Commission on violence
and discrimination against individuals based on their sexual orientation and gender identity
(A/HRC/19/41).
Contents
Paragraphs Page
I. Introduction ............................................................................................................. 1 – 2 3
II. Recent developments............................................................................................... 3 – 8 3
III. Applicable international standards and obligations ................................................. 9 – 19 4
A. To protect individuals from violence .............................................................. 11 – 12 5
B. To prevent torture and ill-treatment ................................................................ 13 – 14 5
C. To decriminalize homosexuality and to repeal other laws used to punish
individuals on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity ................. 15 6
D. To protect individuals from discrimination on grounds of sexual orientation
and gender identity ......................................................................................... 16 – 17 6
E. To protect rights to freedom of expression, association and assembly and to take
part in the conduct of public affairs ................................................................ 18 – 19 7
IV. Homophobic and transphobic violence ................................................................... 20 – 40 7
A. Context............................................................................................................ 20 – 25 7
B. Killings ........................................................................................................... 26 – 30 8
C. Other violence, including sexual violence ...................................................... 31 – 33 9
D. Torture and ill-treatment ................................................................................. 34 – 38 10
E. Positive developments since 2011 .................................................................. 39 – 40 11
V. Discrimination ......................................................................................................... 41 – 75 12
A. Discriminatory laws ........................................................................................ 43 – 49 12
B. Discriminatory practices ................................................................................. 50 – 70 14
C. Positive developments since 2011 .................................................................. 71 – 75 19
VI. Conclusions and recommendations ......................................................................... 76 – 81 20
A. States ............................................................................................................... 78 – 79 20
B. National human rights institutions .................................................................. 80 21
C. Human Rights Council ................................................................................... 81 22
I. Introduction
1. In 2011, pursuant to Human Rights Council resolution 17/19, the United Nations
High Commissioner for Human Rights submitted a report to the Council in which she
described a pattern of discrimination and violence directed at people in all regions on the
basis of their sexual orientation and gender identity.1 Almost three years on, in its resolution
27/32, the Council requested the High Commissioner to update the above-mentioned report
with a view to sharing good practices and ways to overcome violence and discrimination, in
application of existing international human rights law and standards.
2. The present report draws on recent findings of United Nations human rights bodies,
regional organizations and non-governmental organizations, and information submitted by
Governments, including 28 replies to a note verbale addressed to Member States on 29
December 2014.2
II. Recent developments
3. In recent years, Governments in all regions have pursued a variety of initiatives
aimed at reducing levels of violence and discrimination based on sexual orientation and
gender identity. For example, since 2011, 14 States have adopted or strengthened anti-
discrimination and hate crime laws, extending protection on grounds of sexual orientation
and/or gender identity and, in two cases, also introducing legal protections for intersex
persons. Three States have abolished criminal sanctions for homosexuality; 12 have
introduced marriage or civil unions for same-sex couples nationally; and 10 have
introduced reforms that, to varying degrees, make it easier for transgender persons to obtain
legal recognition of their gender identity.
4. In dozens of countries, police, judges, prison guards, medical staff and teachers are
receiving gender and sexuality sensitivity training, anti-bullying programmes have been
launched in schools, and shelters have been built to house homeless lesbian, gay, bisexual
and transgender (LGBT) youth. Popular television programmes have integrated LGBT
characters in a positive way and celebrities have helped to raise awareness by “coming out”
as LGBT persons themselves or speaking out in support of members of the LGBT
community. In all regions, LGBT and intersex3 human rights defenders are more vocal and
visible – in several cases successfully challenging in the courts attempts by authorities to
restrict their legitimate activities.
5. While these advances are welcome, they are overshadowed by continuing, serious
and widespread human rights violations perpetrated, too often with impunity, against
individuals based on their sexual orientation and gender identity. Since 2011, hundreds of
people have been killed and thousands more injured in brutal, violent attacks – some of
which are chronicled below. Other documented violations include torture, arbitrary
detention, denial of rights to assembly and expression, and discrimination in health care,
1 A/HRC/19/41.
2 Replies are available on the website of the Office of the High Commissioner at
www.ohchr.org/EN/Issues/Discrimination/Pages/SOGIHRC29Replies.aspx.
3 While “LGBT” is used in the present report, other terms are used in different regions. References are
also included to violations against intersex persons, who may have any sexual orientation or gender
identity. United Nations human rights mechanisms have repeatedly addressed such violations together
with those directed at LGBT persons.
education, employment and housing. These and related abuses warrant a concerted response
from Governments, legislatures, regional organizations, national human rights institutions
and civil society, as well as from United Nations bodies – the Human Rights Council
included.
6. Concerns regarding the extent and gravity of violence and discrimination against
LGBT and intersex persons have been raised repeatedly by United Nations human rights
treaty bodies and special procedures. In recent years, the Office of the High Commissioner
(OHCHR) has published a range of guidance and public information materials – including
factsheets, booklets and short videos – and has sought to engage States in a constructive
dialogue on ways to better protect the rights of LGBT and intersex persons. In July 2013,
the High Commissioner launched UN Free & Equal (www.unfe.org), a global education
campaign to combat homophobia and transphobia that has so far reached more than a
billion people around the world through events and via traditional and social media.
7. The rights of LGBT persons have also been a focus of work going on across the
wider United Nations system. In his message to the Oslo Conference on Human Rights,
Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity, the Secretary-General described the fight against
homophobia and transphobia as “one of the great, neglected human rights challenges of our
time” and pledged to work for an end to criminalization and for action to tackle violence
and prejudice. United Nations agencies are increasingly integrating issues of sexual
orientation and gender identity into their programmatic work, including in the areas of
development, education, labour rights, child rights, gender equality, refugee protection,
HIV and public health.4
8. Human rights, sexual orientation and gender identity have also been addressed by
regional organizations in Africa, the Americas and Europe. In 2014, the African
Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights passed a resolution in which it condemned
violence and other human rights violations based on real or imputed sexual orientation and
gender identity; the Organization of American States approved its seventh resolution on
human rights, sexual orientation and gender identity, having in 2013 adopted the
Convention against all forms of Discrimination and Intolerance, which addresses these
issues; the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights established the mandate of
Rapporteur on the rights of LGBT and intersex persons, having established a dedicated unit
in 2011; the European Union adopted guidelines on the promotion and protection of human
rights of LGBT and intersex persons, and both the European Parliament and the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe adopted resolutions on the subject; and
the European Court of Human Rights and the Inter-American Court of Human Rights
issued several judgements affirming the rights of LGBT persons to equal treatment and
protection under the law.
III. Applicable international standards and obligations
9. Application of international human rights law is guided by the fundamental
principles of universality, equality and non-discrimination. All human beings, irrespective
of their sexual orientation and gender identity, are entitled to enjoy the protection of
international human rights law with respect to the rights to life, security of person and
privacy, to freedom from torture and ill-treatment, discrimination and arbitrary arrest and
4 See “The Role of the United Nations in Combatting Discrimination and Violence against Individuals
Based on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity”, OHCHR, 2014.
detention, and to freedom of expression, association and peaceful assembly, and all other
civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights.
10. States have well-established obligations to respect, protect and fulfil the human
rights of all persons within their jurisdiction, including LGBT and intersex persons. These
obligations extend to refraining from interference in the enjoyment of rights, preventing
abuses by third parties and proactively tackling barriers to the enjoyment of human rights,
including, in the present context, discriminatory attitudes and practices. Specific related
obligations are elaborated below, building on analysis in the previous report
(A/HRC/19/41) and evolving work of United Nations human rights mechanisms.
A. To protect individuals from violence
11. States have an obligation to exercise due diligence to prevent, investigate, punish
and redress deprivation of life and other acts of violence. United Nations mechanisms have
called upon States to fulfil this obligation by taking legislative and other measures to
prohibit, investigate and prosecute all acts of targeted, hate-motivated violence and
incitement to violence directed at LGBT and intersex persons, and to provide remedy to
victims and protection against reprisals. 5 They have called for State officials to publically
condemn such acts, and to record statistics on such crimes and the outcomes of
investigations, prosecutions and remedial measures. 6 The application of the death penalty
on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity violates fundamental State obligations
to protect the rights to life, privacy, equality before the law and freedom from
discrimination.7
12. States also have an obligation not to return refugees to places where life or freedom
would be threatened on account of actual or perceived sexual orientation and gender
identity.8
B. To prevent torture and ill-treatment
13. States have an obligation to protect all persons, including LGBT and intersex
persons, from torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment in
custodial, medical and other settings. This obligation extends to prohibiting, preventing,
investigating and providing redress for torture and ill-treatment in all contexts of State
control, including by ensuring that such acts are offences under domestic criminal law.9
State responsibility is engaged if public officials, including prison and police officers,
directly commit, instigate, incite, encourage, acquiesce in or otherwise participate or are
complicit in such acts, as well as if officials fail to prevent, investigate, prosecute and
punish such acts by public or private actors.10
14. The medical practices condemned by United Nations mechanisms in this context
include so-called “conversion” therapy, forced genital and anal examinations, forced and
5 See CCPR/C/KGZ/CO/2, para. 9, A/HRC/20/22/Add.2, paras. 5, 55, 76, CCPR/C/MWI/CO/1/Add.1,
para. 10.
6 See CCPR/C/MWI/CO/1, para. 7, A/HRC/26/30/Add.3, para. 88.
7 See CCPR/C/MRT/CO/1, para. 8, A/67/275, paras. 36-38.
8 See also UNHCR, Guidelines on international protection No. 9, HCR/GIP/12/09, 23 October 2012;
CCPR/C/108/D/2149/2012.
9 See CAT/C/GC/3, para. 39.
10 See CAT/C/GC/2, paras. 15-19.
otherwise involuntary sterilization and medically unnecessary surgery and treatment
performed on intersex children.11
C. To decriminalize homosexuality and to repeal other laws used to punish
individuals on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity
15. States have an obligation to protect the rights to privacy, liberty and security of the
person, including the right not to be subjected to arbitrary arrest and detention. United
Nations mechanisms have called upon States to fulfil these obligations by repealing laws
used to punish individuals based on their sexual orientation and gender identity, including
laws criminalizing homosexuality and cross-dressing, and have rejected attempts to justify
such laws on grounds of the protection of public health or morals.12 States must refrain
from arresting or detaining persons on discriminatory grounds, including sexual orientation
and gender identity.13
D. To protect individuals from discrimination on grounds of sexual
orientation and gender identity
16. The protection of rights to equality before the law, equal protection of the law and
freedom from discrimination is a fundamental obligation of States under international law,
and requires States to prohibit and prevent discrimination in private and public spheres, and
to diminish conditions and attitudes that cause or perpetuate such discrimination.14 To this
end, States should enact comprehensive anti-discrimination legislation that includes sexual
orientation and gender identity among protected grounds.15 States should review and repeal
discriminatory laws and address discrimination against LGBT and intersex persons,
including in the enjoyment of the rights to health, education, work, water, adequate housing
and social security.16
17. States also have obligations to address discrimination against children and young
persons who identify or are perceived as LGBT or intersex. This includes harassment,
bullying in schools, lack of access to health information and services, and coercive medical
treatment.17 United Nations mechanisms have called upon States to legally recognize
transgender persons’ preferred gender, without abusive requirements, including
sterilization, forced medical treatment or divorce.18 They have called upon States to develop
education campaigns and train public officials to combat stigma and discriminatory
attitudes, to provide victims of discrimination with effective and appropriate remedies, and
11 See A/HRC/22/53, paras. 76-79, 88, CRC/C/CHE/CO/2-4, paras. 42-43, CAT/C/DEU/CO/5, para. 20.
12 See CCPR/C/50/D/488/1992, paras. 8.3-10, E/C.12/IRN/CO/2, para. 7, CEDAW/C/UGA/CO/7,
paras. 43-44, CRC/C/GAM/CO/2-3, paras. 29-30, A/HRC/14/20 paras. 17-26, CCPR/C/KWT/CO/2,
para. 30.
13 See CCPR/C/GC/35, paras. 3, 17, A/HRC/4/40/Add.1, opinion 22/2006, para. 19; A/HRC/22/44,
para. 38.
14 See CCPR/C/PER/CO/5, para. 8, E/C.12/GC/20, paras. 7-11, CEDAW/C/GC/28, para. 18.
15 See E/C.12/GC/20, para. 32 and, 39, CEDAW/C/CRI/CO/5-6, para. 40, CRC/C/AUS/CO/4, paras.
29-30, CRC/C/CHE/CO/2-4, para. 25.
16 See E/C.12/GC/20, para. 11, 27 and 32, E/C.12/IDN/CO/1, para. 6, CRC/C/IRQ/CO/2-4, paras. 19-
20.
17 See CRC/C/RUS/CO/4-5, paras. 24-25, 55-56, 59-60, CRC/C/GC/15, paras. 8, 31, 60.
18 See CCPR/C/IRL/CO/3, para. 8, CCPR/C/IRL/CO/4, para. 7, CCPR/C/UKR/CO/7, para. 10,
CEDAW/C/NLD/CO/5, paras. 46-47.
to ensure that perpetrators face administrative, civil or criminal responsibility, as
appropriate.19 States should also provide legal recognition and protection to same-sex
couples20 and protect the rights of their children, without discrimination.21
E. To protect rights to freedom of expression, association and assembly
and to take part in the conduct of public affairs
18. States have obligations to protect rights to freedom of thought and expression,
association and peaceful assembly without discrimination on the grounds of sexual
orientation or gender identity. To that end, they should review and repeal discriminatory
provisions in domestic legislation that have a disproportionate impact on the exercise of
these rights by LGBT persons and others advocating for their rights. States should refrain
from directly interfering with these rights and protect LGBT persons exercising these rights
from attacks and reprisals through preventive measures and by investigating attacks,
prosecuting perpetrators and ensuring remedy for victims.22
19. States must protect the right to take part in the conduct of public affairs, without
discrimination, and ensure that LGBT and intersex persons and organizations defending
their rights are consulted with regard to legislation and policies that affect their rights.23
States should take measures to empower LGBT and intersex persons, and to facilitate their
participation in economic, social and political life.24
IV. Homophobic and transphobic violence25
A. Context
20. Due diligence requires States to ensure the protection of those at particular risk of
violence – including, in the present context, those targeted because of their sexual
orientation and gender identity.
21. United Nations human rights mechanisms continue to receive reports of homophobic
and transphobic violence committed in all regions. Such violence may be physical
(including murder, beatings, kidnapping and sexual assault) or psychological (including
threats, coercion and the arbitrary deprivation of liberty, including forced psychiatric
incarceration). These attacks constitute a form of gender-based violence, driven by a desire
to punish individuals whose appearance or behaviour appears to challenge gender
stereotypes.
22. In addition to “street” violence and other spontaneous attacks in public settings,
those perceived as LGBT remain targets of organized abuse, including by religious
19 See CCPR/C/ALB/CO/2, para. 8, CRC/C/TZA/CO/3-5, paras. 55-56, CAT/C/RUS/CO/5, para. 15,
CEDAW/C/CRI/CO/5-6, para. 41, CCPR/C/UKR/CO/7, para. 8, CCPR/C/21/Rev.1/Add.13.
20 See E/C.12/BGR/CO/4-5, para. 17, E/C.12/SVK/CO/2, para. 10, CCPR/C/JPN/CO/5, para. 29.
21 See CRC/C/GC/15, para. 8.
22 See CCPR/C/GC/34, para. 26, CCPR/C/GEO/CO/4, para. 8, A/HRC/25/55/Add.3, para. 364,
A/HRC/26/29.
23 See A/HRC/23/36/Add.2, para. 97, CEDAW/C/DEU/CO/6, para. 61, CCPR/C/IRL/CO/4, para. 7.
24 See A/69/365, paras. 24, 76, 87-91, A/HRC/26/39/Add.2, para. 110(a).
25 See also A/HRC/19/41, paras. 20-39.
extremists, paramilitary groups and extreme nationalists.26 LGBT and gender non-
conforming youth are at risk of family and community violence. Lesbians and transgender
women are at particular risk because of gender inequality and power relations within
families and wider society.27
23. Violence motivated by homophobia and transphobia is often particularly brutal, and
in some instances characterized by levels of cruelty exceeding that of other hate crimes.28
Violent acts include deep knife cuts, anal rape and genital mutilation, as well as stoning and
dismemberment.29
24. United Nations experts have condemned the persistence of impunity for these
violations and repeatedly called for investigation, prosecution and punishment, and
reparations for victims.30 Reported shortcomings include ineffective police action, failure to
register cases, loss of documents, inappropriate classification of acts, including physical
assault as a minor offence, and investigations guided by stereotypes and prejudices.31
25. In most countries, the absence of effective systems for recording and reporting hate-
motivated violence, or “hate crimes”, against LGBT persons masks the true extent of
violence. Where they exist, official statistics tend to understate the number of incidents.32
Victims are often reluctant to report their experiences for fear of extortion, breach of
confidentiality or reprisals. In addition, prejudicial and inexact categorization of cases
results in misidentification, concealment and underreporting.33 Failure to investigate,
prosecute and punish violations when reported also contributes to incomplete assessments
of the scale of violence.34
B. Killings
26. Hate-motivated killings of LGBT individuals have been documented in all regions.
The Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions has noted
“grotesque homicides” perpetrated with broad impunity, allegedly at times with the
“complicity of investigative authorities” (A/HRC/26/36/Add.1, para. 85). Treaty bodies,
special procedures and United Nations agencies continue to express alarm at such killings
and related patterns of violence, including the murder of transsexual women in Uruguay35
and of Black lesbian women in South Africa.36 In an assault in Chile, a gay man was beaten
and killed by neo-Nazis, who burned him with cigarettes and carved swastikas into his
body.37
26 See A/HRC/26/50, paras. 10, 14-15, A/HRC/28/66, para. 11.
27 See A/HRC/26/38/Add.1, para. 19.
28 See A/HRC/20/16, paras. 71-72, and “An Overview of Violence against LGBTI Persons”, annex –
press release 153/14, Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR), 2014, p. 3.
29 See A/HRC/26/36/Add.1, paras. 85-87.
30 See CCPR/C/BOL/CO/3, para. 7, A/HRC/26/36/Add.1, paras. 85-88, CAT/C/GC/3, paras. 8, 32.
31 See A/HRC/23/49/Add.4, para. 23, A/HRC/26/36/Add.1, para. 86.
32 See CCPR/C/URY/CO/5, para. 12, A/HRC/20/16, para. 71.
33 See A/HRC/20/16, paras. 18, 71.
34 See CCPR/C/GTM/CO/3, para. 11, CCPR/C/DOM/CO/5. The IACHR notes a “major
underreporting” of acts of violence against lesbians (see footnote 28, p. 4).
35 CCPR/C/URY/CO/5, para. 12.
36 See A/HRC/20/16, paras. 55, 73, CERD/C/GC/34, para. 23.
37 OHCHR, briefing note on Chile, 30 March 2012.
27. Data are patchy but, wherever available, suggest alarmingly high rates of homicidal
violence. In Brazil, one of relatively few countries where the Government publishes an
annual report on homophobic violence, the authorities documented 310 murders in 2012 in
which homophobia or transphobia was a motive.38 The Inter-American Commission on
Human Rights reported 594 hate-related killings of LGBT persons in the 25 States
members of the Organization of American States between January 2013 and March 2014.39
In its resolution 275, the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights condemned
increasing violence and other human rights violations based on imputed or real sexual
orientation or gender identity. The European Parliament (resolution 2013/2183(INI) and the
Council of Europe (resolution 1948 (2013) have also regularly expressed their concerns.
28. Reporting from non-governmental organizations underscores the prevalence of fatal
violence. The Trans Murder Monitoring project, which collects reports of homicides of
transgender persons in all regions, lists 1,612 murders in 62 countries between 2008 and
2014, equivalent to a killing every two days.40 The National Coalition of Anti-Violence
Programs in the United States of America reported 18 hate violence homicides and 2,001
incidents of anti-LGBT violence in the United States in 2013.41
29. Terrorist groups may target LGBT persons for punishment, including killings.42 In
February 2015, photos appeared to show several men, allegedly accused of homosexual
acts, being pushed off a tower to their deaths by militants of the so-called Islamic State in
Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).43
30. LGBT persons have also been victims of so-called “honour” killings, carried out
against those seen by family or community members to have brought shame on a family,
often for transgressing gender norms or for sexual behaviour, including actual or assumed
homosexual conduct.44
C. Other violence, including sexual violence
31. United Nations experts continue to express their alarm at non-lethal violence
directed at individuals on the grounds of their sexual orientation or gender identity.
Examples include cases of gay men who have been kidnapped, beaten and humiliated, with
film clips of their abuse shared on social media,45 and of lesbians assaulted and raped
because of their sexual orientation.46 In the Syrian Arab Republic, there have been reports
of rape and torture of men assumed to be gay perpetrated by security agents and by non-
State armed groups.47 Concerns have also been expressed about the risk to human rights
38 Second report on homophobic violence in Brazil (2012), Department of Human Rights, June 2013
(available at www.sdh.gov.br/noticias/2013/junho/numero-de-denuncias-de-violencia-homofobica-
cresceu-166-em-2012-diz-relatorio).
39 IACHR (see footnote 28), p. 1.
40 Trans Murder Monitoring results update, November 2014 (available at http://tgeu.org/tmm/).
41 Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer and HIV-Affected Hate Violence in 2013, National
Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs, New York, 2014 (available at http://avp.org/resources/avp-
resources/315).
42 See CRC/C/IRQ/CO/2-4, paras. 27-28.
43 OHCHR, press briefing notes on ISIL/Iraq, 20 January 2015.
44 See A/HRC/23/47/Add.2, para. 49.
45 A/HRC/26/50, para. 14.
46 See CEDAW/C/GUY/CO/7-8, para. 22, A/HRC/20/16, paras. 55, 71, 73, 76.
47 A/HRC/25/65, para. 67-71. Oral update of the Independent International Commission of Inquiry on
the Syrian Arab Republic, 18 March 2014.
defenders working to uphold the rights of LGBT persons, some of whom have been
subjected to violence, threats and verbal denigration.48
32. In the United States, recent government figures show that the number of bias-
motivated incidents based on sexual orientation ranks second only to racist incidents among
single-bias hate crimes.49 A Europe-wide survey of 93,000 LGBT persons conducted in
2013 for the European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights found that a quarter of all
respondents had been attacked or threatened with violence in the previous five years.50 A
survey conducted in 2012 by the non-governmental organization Stonewall in the United
Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland found that one in six LGBT respondents
had experienced a hate crime or incident in the previous three years; of those, 75 per cent
had not reported the experience to the police. 51
33. Treaty bodies and special procedures continue to express concern at rhetoric used to
incite homophobic and transphobic hatred and related violence.52 Such language is used by
some political and community leaders to promote negative stereotypes, stir up prejudice
and harass particular individuals, especially during electoral periods. The High
Commissioner has expressed concern at inflammatory rhetoric used in Belarus, the Gambia
and Honduras.53 The Committee on the Rights of the Child has criticized statements by the
Holy See as contributing to the stigmatization of, and violence against, LGBT adolescents
and children raised by same-sex couples,54 and about the negative impact of hate speech on
LGBT and intersex adults and children in Switzerland.55
D. Torture and ill-treatment
34. The Committee against Torture and the Special Rapporteur on torture and other
cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment have continued to express concerns at
the torture and ill-treatment of LGBT persons in detention by or with the acquiescence of
State officials.56
35. Reported cases include the arrest, beating and ill-treatment by police in Zimbabwe
of 44 members of an LGBT organization.57 Sixteen gay and transgender individuals in the
United States were allegedly subjected to solitary confinement, torture and ill-treatment,
including sexual assault, while in detention in immigration facilities.58 A woman was
reportedly arrested in Bangladesh for being a lesbian, and subsequently beaten and raped by
police while in custody.59 In Egypt, four people arrested on the basis of their alleged sexual
48 See A/HRC/25/55/Add.3, paras. 433-435, 480-482.
49 Uniform Crime Reports, 2013 Hate Crime Statistics, U.S. Department of Justice, 2014 (available at
www.fbi.gov/about-us/cjis/ucr/hate-crime/2013).
50 EU LGBT Survey: Results at a Glance, European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights, 2013, p. 7.
51 Homophobic Hate Crime: the Gay British Crime Survey 2013, Stonewall, 2013, pp. 116-117.
52 See CCPR/C/UKR/CO/7, para. 10, A/67/357, para.75; see also European Court of Human Rights,
application 1813/07, 9 May /2012.
53 Navi Pillay, “Prejudice fuels the denial of rights for LGBT people”, Jakarta Post, 30 April 2014. See
A/HRC/22/47/Add.1, para. 91.
54 CRC/C/VAT/CO/2, para. 25.
55 CRC/C/CHE/CO/2-4, para. 24.
56 See A/HRC/19/61/Add.4, paras. 168, 172, CAT/C/KGZ/CO/2, para. 19.
57 A/HRC/22/53/Add.4, para. 162.
58 Ibid., para. 178.
59 See CCPR/C/108/D/2149/2012), para. 2.2.
orientation and/or gender identity reportedly faced sexual assault by other inmates while in
detention.60
36. The Special Rapporteur on violence against women, its causes and consequences has
highlighted similar cases, noting that those with a non-heterosexual orientation, or whose
gender expression did not fall into exact categories of female and male, were vulnerable to
targeted abuse both by staff and by other prisoners. She expressed concern about lesbian
women being placed in cells with men if they refused the sexual advances of prison staff.
Female prisoners whom guards viewed as “masculine” in appearance were subjected to
harassment, physical abuse and “forced feminization”. Transgender prisoners face
particularly harsh circumstances. In one case, in Guatemala, a transgender woman was
allegedly raped more than 80 times while in detention.61
37. Some States continue to subject men suspected of homosexual conduct to anal
examinations in order to “prove” their homosexuality. Such examinations have been
described as “medically worthless” and condemned by the Committee against Torture, the
Special Rapporteur on torture and the Working Group on Arbitrary Detention; all have held
that the practice contravenes the prohibition on torture and ill-treatment.62
38. Other medical procedures that can, when forced or otherwise involuntary, breach the
prohibition on torture and ill-treatment include “conversion” therapy, sterilization, gender
reassignment, and unnecessary medical interventions involving intersex children (see paras.
14 above and 52, 53 and 70 below).
E. Positive developments since 2011
39. States have adopted a range of measures with a view to addressing homophobic and
transphobic violence, including some highlighted in responses to the note verbale soliciting
inputs for the present report. New or strengthened anti-hate crime laws have been enacted
in several States, including Albania, Chile, Finland, Georgia, Greece, Honduras, Malta,
Montenegro, Portugal and Serbia. Such laws can play an important role in facilitating the
prosecution and punishment of perpetrators of hate-motivated violence and in establishing
homophobia and transphobia as aggravating factors for the purposes of sentencing.
40. Other notable initiatives include the establishment of specialized hate crime
prosecution units (Brazil, Honduras, Mexico, Spain), and an interagency working group on
urgent cases (Colombia); improved police training and sensitization (Canada, Denmark,
France, Montenegro, Philippines) and new policing guidelines (Spain, United Kingdom);
national hotlines to report homophobic incidents (Brazil, Netherlands) and surveys to
improve hate-crime data collection (Belgium (Flanders), Canada); a national task force on
gender- and sexual orientation-based violence (South Africa); policies and protocols for
ensuring the dignity and safety of transgender prisoners (Brazil, Canada); training materials
on the rights of LGBT prisoners (Ecuador); and investigations by the human rights
commission of allegations of torture and ill-treatment of LGBT and intersex detainees
(Nepal).
60 A/HRC/27/72, EGY 4/2014.
61 A/68/340, paras. 58, 59, 63.
62 A/HRC/22/53, paras. 76, 79.
V. Discrimination63
41. The Human Rights Committee and the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights have repeatedly urged States to tackle both direct and indirect discrimination against
all persons, including LGBT and intersex persons.64 States have an obligation to ensure that
laws, policies and programmes executed by State authorities do not discriminate against
individuals. They also have an obligation to address discriminatory practices, including by
private actors, and to take action to prevent, diminish and eliminate the conditions and
attitudes that contribute to substantive or de facto discrimination.
42. Discrimination against LGBT individuals is often exacerbated by other identity
factors, such as sex, ethnicity, age and religion, and socioeconomic factors, such as poverty
and armed conflict.65 The impact of such multiple forms of discrimination may be felt at an
individual level and a societal one, as LGBT persons, deprived of access to such basic
rights as employment, health, education and housing find themselves in poverty, cut off
from economic opportunity.66 Studies undertaken in several countries suggest that rates of
poverty, homelessness and food insecurity are higher among LGBT individuals than in the
wider community.67 The World Bank has documented the negative impact of homophobia
on economic growth and development.68
A. Discriminatory laws
1. Laws criminalizing homosexuality and other laws used to penalize individuals because
of sexual orientation or gender identity
43. States that criminalize consensual homosexual acts are in breach of international
human rights law since these laws, by their mere existence, violate the rights to privacy and
non-discrimination. Arrests and the detention of individuals on charges relating to sexual
orientation and gender identity – including offences not directly related to sexual conduct,
such as those pertaining to physical appearance or so-called “public scandal” – are
discriminatory and arbitrary.69 Since its landmark decision in Toonen v. Australia
(communication No. 488/1992) in 1994, the Human Rights Committee and other
mechanisms have repeatedly urged States to reform laws criminalizing consensual same-
sex conduct, and welcomed their repeal.
44. At least 76 States retain laws that are used to criminalize and harass people on the
basis of sexual orientation and gender identity or expression, including laws criminalizing
63 See also A/HRC/19/41, paras. 40-47.
64 See E/C.12/GC/20, paras. 7-11, CCPR/C/PER/CO/5, para. 8.
65 See CRC/C/GC/15, para. 8, A/HRC/20/16, paras. 17, 23-27, A/HRC/26/50, para. 15,
CEDAW/C/GC/28, para. 18.
66 See A/HRC/27/55, paras. 64-66, E/C.12/PER/CO/2-4, para. 5.
67 See Lucas Paoli Itaborahy, LGBT people living in poverty in Rio de Janeiro (London, Micro
Rainbow, 2014); and Gary J. Gates, “Food Insecurity and SNAP (Food Stamps) Participation in
LGBT Communities”, Williams Institute, February 2014.
68 M.V. Lee Badgett, “The economic cost of stigma and the exclusion of LGBT People: a case study of
India”, World Bank Group, 2014.
69 See CCPR/C/BLZ/CO/1, para. 13, CCPR/C/PHL/CO/4, para. 10, CCPR/C/SLV/CO/6, para. 3(c).
consensual, adult same-sex relationships.70 Sometimes inherited as colonial-era legislation,
these laws typically prohibit certain types of sexual activity or any intimacy between
persons of the same sex. Cross-dressing or “imitating the opposite sex” is also sometimes
penalized.71 Wording often refers to vague and undefined concepts, such as “crimes against
the order of nature” or “morality”, “debauchery”, “indecent acts” or “grave scandal”.72
Penalties include lashings, life imprisonment and the death penalty.
45. Human rights mechanisms continue to emphasize links between criminalization and
homophobic and transphobic hate crimes, police abuse, torture, family and community
violence and stigmatization, as well as the constraints that criminalization put on the work
of human rights defenders.73 The Special Rapporteur on freedom of religion or belief has
noted that these laws may give a pretext to vigilante groups and other perpetrators of hatred
for intimidating people and committing acts of violence.74
2. Death penalty
46. In the Islamic Republic of Iran, Mauritania, Saudi Arabia, the Sudan and Yemen,
and in parts of Nigeria and Somalia, the death penalty may be applied in cases of
consensual homosexual conduct. Death is also the prescribed punishment for
homosexuality in the revised penal code of Brunei, although relevant provisions have yet to
take effect.
47. The application of the death penalty in this context represents a grave violation of
human rights, including the rights to life, privacy and non-discrimination. The Human
Rights Committee and the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights have
repeatedly expressed concern about death sentences for consensual adult sexual conduct.75
The Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions has reiterated
that death sentences may only be imposed for the most serious crimes and that offences
related to homosexual conduct and sexual relations between consenting adults do not meet
that threshold.76
3. “Anti-propaganda” laws
48. In the past two years, laws have been enacted or proposed in several States that seek
to restrict public discussion of sexual orientation under the guise of “protecting minors”
from information on so-called “non-traditional sexual relations”.77 These laws, sometimes
called “anti-propaganda” laws, are often vaguely worded and arbitrarily restrict the rights to
freedom of expression and assembly. They also contribute to ongoing persecution of
members of the LGBT community, including young persons who identify or are perceived
as LGBT.78 The Special procedures mandate holders on human rights defenders, on
freedom of opinion and expression and on freedom of peaceful assembly and of association
70 Lucas Paoli Itaborahy and Jingshu Zhu, State-sponsored Homophobia, International Lesbian, Gay,
Bisexual, Transgender and Intersex Association (ILGA), Brussels, 2014), p. 21. Mozambique and
Palau have decriminalized homosexuality since the publication of the report.
71 See CCPR/C/KWT/CO/2, para. 30.
72 See CCPR/C/PHL/CO/4, para. 10, CCPR/C/ETH/CO/1, para. 12.
73 See A/HRC/26/29, para. 27, CCPR/C/SLE/CO/1, para. 11.
74 A/HRC/28/66, para. 42.
75 See CCPR/C/YEM/CO/5, para. 13, E/C.12/IRN/CO/2, para. 7.
76 See A/67/275, paras. 36-38, A/HRC/27/23, para. 28.
77 See CEDAW/C/KGZ/CO/4, para. 9.
78 See CCPR/C/106/D/1932/2010, para. 10.8, CCPR/C/LTU/CO/3, para. 8.
have expressed concerns in this context about developments in Kyrgyzstan, Nigeria, the
Republic of Moldova, the Russian Federation, Uganda and Ukraine.79
49. In some cases, these laws have been accompanied by bans on non-governmental
organizations receiving funding from abroad, allegedly in order to curb the influence of
“foreign agents”.80 Such measures put defenders at risk of arrest, violence and
discrimination, and can threaten rights relating to, inter alia, health, education, cultural
expression and information.81
B. Discriminatory practices82
1. Health care
50. Laws criminalizing homosexuality and the discriminatory policies, practices and
attitudes of health-care institutions and personnel adversely affect the quality of health
services,83 deter individuals from seeking services,84 and may lead to the denial of care or to
an absence of services that respond to the specific health needs of LGBT and intersex
persons.85
51. The negative health impact of laws criminalizing homosexuality has been widely
acknowledged, including by the World Health Organization (WHO), the United Nations
Development Programme (UNDP), the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS
(UNAIDS), the treaty bodies and the special procedures of the Human Rights Council.86
The Global Commission on HIV and the Law found, for instance, that in Caribbean
countries with laws that criminalize homosexuality, almost one in four men who have sex
with men is HIV positive; the equivalent figure in Caribbean countries with no such laws is
one in 15.87
52. There is mounting concern about so-called “conversion therapies” intended to
“cure” homosexual attraction. Such therapies have been found to be unethical, unscientific
and ineffective and, in some instances, tantamount to torture – leading to successful legal
challenges and bans in several countries.88 In Ecuador, concerns have been raised about
79 See A/HRC/23/51, UKR 3/2012; A/HRC/25/74, MDA 4/2013; RUS 3/2013, RUS 4/2013;
A/HRC/26/21, NGA 1/2014, UGA 1/2014, UGA 1/2013; A/HRC/27/72, KGZ/1/2014.
80 A/HRC/25/74, RUS 3/2013.
81 See A/66/203, paras. 17-18, A/69/307, paras. 84-89.
82 See also A/HRC/19/41, paras. 48-73.
83 See CCPR/C/TUR/CO/1, para. 10, CEDAW/C/NOR/CO/8, paras. 33-34.
84 See CCPR/C/JAM/CO/3, paras. 8- 9, A/HRC/14/20, paras. 20-23. See also UN Free & Equal
factsheet, “Criminalization” (available at www.unfe.org/en/fact-sheets).
85 See A/64/272, para. 46.
86 See “Secretary-General, in observance message, equates fight against homophobia with struggle to
eliminate racism, promote gender equality”, press release, 16 May 2013; E/C.12/JAM/CO/3-4, para.
28; and Risks, Rights and Health, Global Commission on HIV and the Law, UNDP, 2012, in
particular pp. 44-54.
87 Ibid., p. 45.
88 See A/HRC/22/53, para. 88; Sharon Bernstein, “Supreme Court won't intervene in California ban on
gay-conversion therapy”, Reuters, 1 July 2014; and Ed Adamczyk, “Beijing court rules gay-
conversion clinic treatments illegal”, UPI, 19 December 2014.
“rehabilitation clinics” where lesbians and transgender youths have been forcibly detained
with the collusion of family members and subjected to torture, including sexual abuse.89
53. Many intersex children, born with atypical sex characteristics, are subjected to
medically unnecessary surgery and treatment in an attempt to force their physical
appearance to align with binary sex stereotypes. Such procedures are typically irreversible
and can cause severe, long-term physical and psychological suffering. Those to have called
for an end to the practice include the Committee on the Rights of the Child, the Committee
against Torture, the special procedures mandate holders on the right to health and on
torture.90
54. Transgender persons often face particular difficulties in their access to appropriate
health care. Health-care professionals may be insensitive to their needs, lack relevant
knowledge and treat transgender persons in a discriminatory manner. Gender reassignment
therapy, where available, is often prohibitively expensive. In certain situations, it is
coerced.91
2. Education
55. Many children and adolescents perceived as LGBT or gender non-conforming
experience discrimination, harassment and, in some cases, violent abuse both in and outside
of school. 92 Such abuse can force students to skip or drop out of school, and can lead to
feelings of isolation and depression, even suicide.
56. High levels of bullying have been recorded in all regions. A European Union study
found that 80 per cent of school-age children surveyed heard negative comments or saw
negative conduct directed at schoolmates perceived as lesbian, gay, bisexual or
transgender.93 A survey conducted by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization (UNESCO) of students in Thailand found that more than half of
LGBT respondents had been bullied in the previous month, and more than 30 per cent had
experienced physical abuse.94 These findings mirror those of studies conducted in other
countries.
57. Limiting or obstructing information related to sexuality or using materials that
contain stereotypes and prejudices can contribute to violence and expose young LGBT
persons to health risks.95 Comprehensive sexuality education is part of the right to
education and can be a tool for combating discrimination.
3. Employment
58. In most States, national laws do not provide adequate protection from employment-
related discrimination on grounds of sexual orientation and gender identity.96 In the absence
89 CCPR/C/ECU/CO/5, para. 12. See “IACHR expresses concern about violence and discrimination
against LGBTI persons, particularly youth, in the Americas”, press release, 15 August 2013.
90 See CRC/C/CHE/CO/2-4, para. 42, CAT/C/DEU/CO/5, para, 20, A/HRC/22/53, para. 88, A/64/272,
para. 49.
91 See A/HRC/25/61, annex II.
92 See E/CN.4/2001/52, para. 75, E/CN.4/2006/45, para. 113, CRC/C/RUS/CO/4-5, para. 59.
93 EU LGBT Survey, EU Agency for Fundamental Rights (see footnote 50), p. 12.
94 “Bullying targeting secondary school students who are or are perceived to be transgender or same-sex
attracted”, Mahidol University, Plan International Thailand, UNESCO, 2014, p. 14.
95 See CRC/C/RUS/CO/4-5, para. 55, CRC/GC/2003/4, paras. 26, 28; A/65/162, paras. 4, 6, 23, 63,
A/68/290, paras. 52, 54.
96 ILGA, State-sponsored Homophobia (see footnote 70), p. 21.
of such laws, employers may fire or refuse to hire or promote people simply because they
are seen as lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender.97 Where laws do exist, they may be poorly
applied. Workplace benefits available to heterosexual employees may be denied to their
LGBT counterparts. Surveys indicate that discrimination and verbal and other forms of
harassment in the workplace are commonplace.98
4. Housing
59. LGBT persons may experience discrimination in access to housing as a result of
unfair treatment by public and private landlords. Concerns include LGBT individuals and
same-sex couples denied leases and evicted from public housing,99 harassed by neighbours
and forced out of their homes.100 Many LGBT-identifying adolescents and young adults are
thrown out of home by disapproving parents and end up on the streets, resulting in
disproportionately high rates of homelessness among this group. A recent survey of 354
homeless support agencies in the United States suggested that some 40 per cent of homeless
youth identify as LGBT, with family rejection the leading cause of homelessness among
this group.101
5. Freedom of expression, association and assembly
60. United Nations human rights experts continue to highlight discriminatory
restrictions on the rights to freedom of expression, association and assembly of LGBT
persons and those defending their rights.102 Concerns include direct censorship, bans on
dissemination of information and restrictions on advocacy.103
61. LGBT organizations continue to have registration applications rejected, reviews
delayed and legal registration revoked on discriminatory grounds.104 Permission to hold
meetings, workshops and cultural events may be denied in an attempt to suppress political
and artistic expression.105 Police officers have raided the offices of LGBT groups, arrested
and harassed staff and volunteers, and confiscated materials, sometimes putting the privacy
and safety of staff and supporters at risk.106 The offices of LGBT organizations have been
targets of vandalism, burglary and arson,107 and such incidents are seldom investigated
promptly.108
97 See A/69/318, para.17; and “Discrimination at work on the basis of sexual orientation and gender
identity: Results of pilot research” (GB.319/LILS/INF/1), International Labour Office, October 2013,
pp. 2-3.
98 EU LGBT Survey, EU Agency for Fundamental Rights (see footnote 50), p.17; April Guasp, “Gay in
Britain: Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual People’s Experiences and Expectations of Discrimination”,
Stonewall, 2012, pp.3, 19.
99 See A/69/274, para. 12.
100 See A/HRC/19/53, paras. 50, 51, 63.
101 See “Serving Our Youth”, Williams Institute, True Colors Fund and the Palette Fund, 2012, p. 3.
102 See CCPR/C/GEO/CO/4, para. 8, A/HRC/26/30/Add.2, para. 77.
103 See A/HRC/20/22/Add.2, para. 55, A/64/211, paras. 21-27.
104 See A/69/307, para. 30.
105 See A/HRC/23/34/Add.1, paras. 101-103.
106 See A/HRC/22/53/Add.4, para. 162.
107 A/HRC/25/74, MKD 2/2013; A/HRC/23/51, CRI 2/2012.
108 See A/69/307, para. 86, A/HRC/22/53/Add. 4, para. 162, A/HRC/25/71, para. 55, A/HRC/26/52, para.
33.
62. Private and State agents target “pride” marches, where LGBT persons and their
supporters are sometimes subjected to violence and harassment.109 In some States, such
events are denied police protection or permits, sometimes under guise of threats to public
morals or safety, abrogating the State’s duty to uphold freedom of assembly and to protect
LGBT persons from violence.110 In the absence of proper police protection, marchers have
been physically attacked and harassed by State and non-State actors, including far-right
“skinhead” groups.111
63. Women defenders and those advocating for gender- and sexuality-related rights are
often at particular risk because they are seen as challenging traditional assumptions about
the role and status of women in society.112
6. Asylum and migration
64. Asylum and migration policies in this context vary considerably. The Office of the
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) estimates that some 42 States
have granted asylum to individuals with a well-founded fear of persecution owing to sexual
orientation or gender identity. At international borders, migrants and refugees may be
subjected to invasive physical screenings and examinations and denied entry on
discriminatory grounds.113
65. Practices in States granting asylum sometimes fall short of international standards.
Officials may be insensitive to the conditions facing LGBT asylum-seekers, and review of
applications is sometimes arbitrary and inconsistent.114 In its judgement of 2 December
2014, the Court of Justice of the European Union ordered States to cease use of intrusive
questioning and medical tests purportedly designed to reveal applicants’ sexual orientation.
Refugees and migrants are sometimes subjected to violence and discrimination while in
detention facilities,115 and when resettled, may be housed within communities where they
experience additional sexuality- and gender-related risks. The refoulement of asylum
seekers fleeing such persecution exposes them to the risk of violence, discrimination,
criminalization and the death penalty.116
7. Family and community
66. States’ responsibility to protect individuals from discrimination extends to the
family sphere, where rejection and discriminatory treatment of and violence against LGBT
and intersex family members can have serious, negative consequences for the enjoyment of
human rights. Examples include individuals being physically assaulted, raped, excluded
from family homes, disinherited, prevented from going to school, sent to psychiatric
institutions, forced to marry, forced to give up custody of their children, punished for
activist work and subjected to attacks on personal reputation. In States where
homosexuality is criminalized, victims may be reluctant to report violence perpetrated by a
109 See A/HRC/23/34, paras. 49-50, A/HRC/26/36/Add.2, paras. 43-45.
110 CCPR/C/109/D/1873/2009, para. 9.6, A/HRC/23/49/Add.4, para. 22.
111 See A/HRC/10/12/Add.1, paras. 275-280, A/HRC/11/4/Add.1, paras. 289-2294, A/HRC/16/44/Add.1,
paras. 1157–1164.
112 See A/HRC/22/47/Add.1, para. 88, and “Study on the situation of women human rights defenders in
Africa”, Special Rapporteur on human rights defenders, African Commission on Human and Peoples’
Rights, 2015.
113 A/69/CRP.1, p. 15.
114 UNHCR, HCR/GIP/12/09 (see footnote 8).
115 See A/HRC/22/53/Add.4, para. 178.
116 See CCPR/C/108/D/2149/2012, para 2.4, CCPR/C/103/D/1833/2008, para. 9.2.
family member for fear of the criminal ramifications of revealing their sexual orientation.
Lesbians, bisexual women and transgender persons are often especially at risk owing to
gender inequalities and restrictions on autonomy in decision-making about sexuality,
reproduction and family life.117
8. Recognition of relationships and related access to State and other benefits
67. While States are not required under international law to recognize same-sex
marriage,118 the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights has called upon States
to provide for legal recognition of same-sex couples.119 As at April 2015, 34 States offered
same-sex couples either marriage or civil unions, which bestow many of the same benefits
and entitlements as marriage.120 Wherever States provide benefits such as pension and
inheritance entitlements for unmarried heterosexual couples, the same benefits should be
available to unmarried homosexual couples.121
68. Lack of official recognition of same-sex relationships and absence of legal
prohibition on discrimination can result in same-sex partners being treated unfairly by
private actors, including health-care providers and insurance companies. The United
Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the Committee on the Rights of the Child and the
Inter-American Court of Human Rights have expressed concern at discrimination against,
and the lack of legal protection of, children of same-sex couples.122
9. Gender recognition and related issues
69. In spite of recent advances in several countries, transgender persons are generally
still unable to obtain legal recognition of their preferred gender, including a change in
recorded sex and first name on State-issued identity documents. As a result, they face
multiple rights challenges, including in employment and housing, applying for bank credit
or State benefits, or when travelling abroad.
70. Regulations in States that recognize changes in gender often impose abusive
requirements as a precondition of recognition – for example, by requiring that applicants be unmarried and undergo forced sterilization, forced gender reassignment and other medical
procedures, in violation of international human rights standards.123
117 See A/68/290, para. 38, A/HRC/20/16/Add.4, para. 20, A/HRC/22/56, para. 70, A/HRC/26/38/Add.1,
para. 19.
118 See CCPR/C/75/D/902/1999.
119 E/C.12/BGR/CO/4-5, para17; E/C.12/SVK/CO/2, para. 10.
120 ILGA, State-sponsored Homophobia (see footnote 70), pp. 26-28.
121 See CCPR/C/CHN/HKG/CO/3, para. 23, CCPR/C/78/D/941/2000, para. 10.4,
CEDAW/C/SRB/CO/2-3, para. 39(d); also European Court of Human Rights, applications 29381/09
and 32684/09, 7 November 2013, paras. 79-81.
122 See CRC/C/GC/15, para.8 and CRC/C/GAM/CO/2-3, paras. 29-30; and “Eliminating discrimination
against children and parents based on sexual orientation and/or gender identity”, UNICEF, position
paper no.9, 2014, and Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Atala Riffo and daughters v. Chile, 24
February 2012.
123 See CCPR/C/IRL/CO/4, para. 7, CCPR/C/UKR/CO/7, para. 10, A/HRC/22/53, para. 88; also
“Eliminating forced, coercive and otherwise involuntary sterilization: an interagency statement”,
OHCHR, UN-Women, UNAIDS, UNDP, UNFPA, UNICEF and WHO, 2014.
C. Positive developments since 2011
71. Three States (Mozambique, Palau and Sao Tome and Principe) have decriminalized
consensual same-sex conduct, and several others have accepted recommendations to do so.
The United Kingdom and several states in Australia have adopted measures to expunge the
criminal records of individuals convicted of consensual homosexuality-related offences.
72. Fiji has added an anti-discrimination clause in its Constitution prohibiting
discrimination based on sexual orientation, gender identity and gender expression, and
Malta has added gender identity to the list of prohibited grounds of discrimination included
in its Constitution. Anti-discrimination laws have also been strengthened in several States,
including Chile, Cuba, Georgia, the Republic of Moldova, Montenegro, as well as in
Australia and Malta, which became the first countries to expressly prohibit discrimination
against intersex persons.
73. Legal recognition of same-sex relationships was introduced in at least 12 additional
States, either in the form of civil marriage (Brazil, Denmark, France, Luxembourg, New
Zealand, United Kingdom, Uruguay) or civil unions (Chile, Croatia, Ireland, Liechtenstein,
Malta). Argentina, Denmark and Malta established new laws that allow transgender persons
to obtain legal recognition of their gender identity on the basis of self-determination, while
Australia (Australian Capital Territory), the Netherlands and Sweden removed abusive
sterilization, forced treatment and divorce requirements. Argentina furthermore established
access to free gender-affirming treatment for those who wish to receive such treatment.
Nepal and Bangladesh created a legal “third gender” category, and new passport policies in
Australia and New Zealand allow individuals to choose male, female or indeterminate
gender markers. The Supreme Court of India affirmed the right of transgender persons to
determine their own gender, and called upon the Government to ensure equal rights for
transgender persons, including in access to health care, employment and education. Malta
became the first State to prohibit sex-assignment surgery or treatment on intersex minors
without their informed consent.
74. Other initiatives include the development of a new judicial protocol to guide
adjudication of cases involving human rights violations on grounds of sexual orientation
and gender identity (Mexico); implementation of employment-related anti-discrimination
protections (Bolivia (Plurinational State of), Botswana); new guidance materials and
training for police, teachers and/or other officials (Canada, Colombia, Croatia, Denmark,
Montenegro, Norway, Mexico, Serbia, Spain); expansion of anti-bullying programmes and
other anti-discrimination measures in schools (Albania, Australia, Brazil, Canada, Taiwan
province of China, Ireland, Portugal, Sweden, United Kingdom), and annual reporting on
discrimination and violence in schools (Brazil); LGBT suicide prevention programmes
(Belgium, Japan, United Kingdom); a human rights-based comprehensive sexuality
education curriculum for schools (South Africa); scholarships for transgender persons who
enrol in vocational training (Brazil); construction of homeless shelters for LGBT youth
(Albania, United States); and no longer requiring external corroboration of sexual
orientation or gender identity for LGBT asylum-seekers (Italy, Portugal).
75. National plans of action were developed to tackle discrimination against LGBT
persons in Brazil, Canada (Quebec), France, Norway, South Africa and the United
Kingdom, and, in Uruguay, a plan to combat the social exclusion of transgender persons.
Several States also launched national public education campaigns to counter homophobia
and transphobia (Argentina, Australia, Belgium (Flanders), Brazil, Colombia, Cuba,
Montenegro, Serbia, South Africa, United Kingdom, Uruguay). Mexico has officially
designated 17 May as the National Day against Homophobia.
VI. Conclusions and recommendations
76. The present study is the second on violence and discrimination based on sexual
orientation and gender identity requested by the Human Rights Council. While some
progress has been made since the first study in 2011, the overall picture remains one
of continuing, pervasive, violent abuse, harassment and discrimination affecting
LGBT and intersex persons in all regions. These constitute serious human rights
violations, often perpetrated with impunity, indicating that current arrangements to
protect the human rights of LGBT and intersex persons are inadequate. There is as
yet no dedicated human rights mechanism at the international level that has a
systematic and comprehensive approach to the human rights situation of LGBT and
intersex persons.
77. The recommendations below describe measures to protect individuals from the
kinds of human rights violations documented above. They draw from good practices
observed in the course of compiling the report and recommendations of United
Nations human rights mechanisms.
A. States
78. The High Commissioner recommends that States address violence by:
(a) Enacting hate crime laws that establish homophobia and transphobia as
aggravating factors for purposes of sentencing;
(b) Conducting prompt, thorough investigations of incidents of hate-
motivated violence against and torture of LGBT persons, holding perpetrators to
account, and providing redress to victims;
(c) Collecting and publishing data on the number and types of incidents,
while providing for the security of those reporting;
(d) Prohibiting incitement of hatred and violence on the grounds of sexual
orientation and gender identity, and holding to account those responsible for related
hate speech;
(e) Training law enforcement personnel and judges in gender-sensitive
approaches to addressing violations related to sexual orientation and gender identity;
(f) Ensuring that police and prison officers are trained to protect the safety
of LGBT detainees, and holding to account State officials involved or complicit in
incidents of violence;
(g) Banning “conversion” therapy, involuntary treatment, forced
sterilization and forced genital and anal examinations;
(h) Prohibiting medically unnecessary procedures on intersex children;
(i) Ensuring that no one fleeing persecution on grounds of sexual
orientation or gender identity is returned to a territory where his or her life or
freedom would be threatened, that asylum laws and policies recognize that
persecution on account of sexual orientation or gender identity may be a valid basis
for an asylum claim; and eliminating intrusive, inappropriate questioning on asylum
applicants’ sexual histories, and sensitizing refugee and asylum personnel.
79. States should address discrimination by:
(a) Revising criminal laws to remove offences relating to consensual same-
sex conduct and other offences used to arrest and punish persons on the basis of their
sexual orientation and gender identity or expression; ordering an immediate
moratorium on related prosecution; and expunging the criminal records of
individuals convicted of such offences;
(b) Repealing so-called “anti-propaganda” and other laws that impose
discriminatory restrictions on freedom of expression, association and assembly;
(c) Ensuring that anti-discrimination legislation includes sexual orientation
and gender identity among prohibited grounds, and also protects intersex persons
from discrimination;
(d) Integrating analysis of violations based on sexual orientation and gender
identity in national plans of action, thereby ensuring coordination and adequate
resourcing of related activities, accountability for perpetrators, and redress for
victims;
(e) Sensitizing health-care workers to the health needs of LGBT and
intersex persons, including in the areas of sexual and reproductive health and rights,
suicide prevention, HIV/AIDS and trauma counselling;
(f) Establishing national standards on non-discrimination in education;
developing anti-bullying programmes and establishing helplines and other services to
support LGBT and gender-non-conforming youth; and providing comprehensive,
age-appropriate sexuality education;
(g) Ensuring that housing policies do not discriminate against tenants based
on sexual orientation and gender identity; and establishing shelters for homeless
LGBT persons, with specific attention to youth, older persons and those in emergency
situations;
(h) Providing legal recognition to same-sex couples and their children,
ensuring that benefits traditionally accorded married partners – including those
related to benefits, pensions, and taxation and inheritance – are accorded on a non-
discriminatory basis;
(i) Issuing legal identity documents, upon request, that reflect preferred
gender, eliminating abusive preconditions, such as sterilization, forced treatment and
divorce;
(j) Supporting public education campaigns to counter homophobic and
transphobic attitudes, and addressing negative, stereotypical portrayals of LGBT
persons in the media;
(k) Ensuring that LGBT and intersex persons and organizations are
consulted with regard to legislation and policies that have an impact on their rights.
B. National human rights institutions
80. The High Commissioner recommends that national human rights institutions
address violence and discrimination against LGBT and intersex persons in the context
of their respective mandates to promote and monitor effective implementation of
international human rights standards at the national level.
C. Human Rights Council
81. As the intergovernmental body with responsibility for promoting and
protecting human rights worldwide, the Human Rights Council should keep itself
regularly informed of patterns of violence and discrimination linked to sexual
orientation and gender identity, as well as emerging State responses. To this end,
OHCHR stands ready to submit further reports upon request, and current special
procedures mandate holders should be encouraged to continue to report on related
violations within their respective mandates.