Transgender influencer's murder shocks Georgia

Transgender influencer’s murder shocks Georgia

/ 09:19 AM September 20, 2024

Murder of transgender influencer shocks Georgia

A well-known transgender woman in Georgia was stabbed to death in her apartment on Wednesday, authorities say on Thursday, September 19, 2024. INQUIRER FILES/Stock image

TBILISI, Georgia — A well-known Georgian transgender woman was stabbed to death in her apartment on Wednesday, authorities said, in a “premeditated” attack that came amid criticism of a government crackdown on LGBTQ rights.

The Caucasus nation’s ruling Georgian Dream party has advanced a “family values” bill that has been compared to Russia’s “gay propaganda” law and criticized by the European Union and rights groups as stigmatizing LGBTQ people.

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Actress, influencer, and model Kesaria Abramidze was killed in a knife attack on September 18 – the day after the bill passed its third and final reading – the interior ministry said on Thursday.

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Abramidze, 37, was the first person in Georgia to publicly come out as transgender. She represented the country at the Miss Trans Star International contest in 2018 and had more than 500,000 followers on Instagram.

The interior ministry said she suffered “multiple stab wounds” and that it was investigating a “premeditated murder committed with particular cruelty and aggravating circumstances on gender grounds.”

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Police have arrested a suspect, identified by Georgian media as Abramidze’s boyfriend.

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The murder has shocked parts of the Black Sea country, which has been rocked by major protests and political tensions for months.

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Equality Movement, an LGBTQ rights organization in Georgia, condemned the murder in a post on social media platform X.

“This is a wake-up call for Georgia. We must end intolerance and protect the lives of our community,” it said.

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READ: Transgender influencer Nikita Dragun arrested for felony battery, placed in men’s unit

Another Georgian rights group, Social Justice Center, said: “There is a direct correlation between the use of hate speech in politics and hate crimes.”

“It has been almost a year that the Georgian Dream government has been aggressively using homo/bi/transphobic language and cultivating it with mass propaganda means.”

‘Horrific murder’ of transgender

Critics, including the EU, have accused Georgian Dream of pushing an anti-Western, anti-liberal agenda ahead of crucial elections next month.

Pro-EU President Salome Zurabishvili – at loggerheads with the government – condemned the “horrific murder” in a Facebook post, saying “the tragedy must awaken Georgian society.”

Abramidze herself had previously criticized the government’s approach to domestic violence and women’s rights.

In April, she said she was forced to temporarily flee abroad, fearing for her life after attacks from a former partner.

“No to the femicide that has become so frequent in our country!” she said.

READ: 12 Filipino trans icons you should know on Transgender Day of Visibility

Georgia’s own rights ombudsman said in 2022 that “LGBT+ people face persistent discrimination and violence in all spheres of life.”

The latest measures, which need to be signed into law by Zurabishvili or the parliament’s speaker, “concern restricting, in educational institutions and TV broadcasts, the propaganda of same-sex relationships and incest.”

Rights groups have criticized the wording for putting homosexual relations on a par with incest.

It also bans gender transition, adoptions by gay and transgender people, and nullifies same-sex marriages performed abroad.

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Brussels has said the bill “undermines fundamental rights of Georgians and risks further stigmatisation and discrimination of part of the population.”

TAGS: LGBTQ rights, transgender killing

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