Democracy & Justice

Protests Over Gender-Based Violence; Office Of LGBTI Rights Organisation Vandalised

As is the case in many other European countries, Spain started to ease COVID-19 related restrictions as new COVID-19 infection numbers began to drop consistently. On 9th May 2021, the state of emergency ended.

by LibertiesEU

The nationwide nightly curfew is no longer in place, but different regions have specific measures in place depending on the severity of the pandemic in the given region.

Association

On 3rd May 2021, the headquarters of Cogam, a non-profit organisation that has been fighting for the equality of LGBTI people for over 30 years in Madrid was vandalised with transphobic graffiti messages opposing the Law on Sexual Diversity. The law states that all people, regardless of their sexual orientation, sexual diversity or gender identity have the right to equal treatment before the law and the right to be protected against discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity. The graffiti included transphobic messages such as “reproductive exploiters" and " trans law is misogyny."

HRD takes case to ECtHR

On 2nd June 2021, Spain's Constitutional Court confirmed the conviction of Jordi Cuixart, president of Òmnium Cultural, for sedition. Cuixart was prosecuted and sentenced to nine years in prison for his role in peaceful demonstrations in favour of the Catalan referendum in 2017. While the majority of magistrates confirmed the conviction, two magistrates provided a dissenting judgment, stating that the Supreme Court’s earlier ruling, which the Constitutional Court confirmed, “threatens to deteriorate democracy in Spain”. They added that peaceful assembly “should have been particularly protected in this case” considering that Cuixart is a civil society leader.

Since all legal avenues have been exhausted in Spain, Cuixart will now bring his case before the European Court of Human Rights on the grounds that his right to freedoms of peaceful assembly and expression were violated.

Peaceful Assembly

Protest against gender-based violence

On 11th June 2021, spontaneous protests were held across the country against gender-based violence after the body of a six-year-old girl named Olivia was found on the seabed of the Canary Island, Tenerife. Olivia and her sister Anna has been missing since April 2021, and it is suspected they were killed by their father. Around 800 people protested in Santa Cruz, Tenerife the majority of whom were young women. In Madrid, about 2,000 people attended the protest and in Valencia over a thousand people showed up to protest. Protestors chanted: “We’re not dying, they’re killing us.” Marta Carramiñana, a member of the Madrid Feminist Movement and the 8-M women’s day movement, said:

“We need feminist education from an early age to combat this violence, because these men aren’t crazy or sick, they are healthy children of the patriarchy.”

While the protest was triggered by the outrage over finding Olivia’s body, the protests were likely to have been sparked by the increased violence against women in general. In the week of 17th May 2021, five women were killed by their partners, one of whom was pregnant. According to the Guardian, since lockdown restrictions were eased, more femicides by current or former partners have been reported. The Guardian reports that this may very likely be linked to women trying to escape abusive situations after months of lockdown.

Catalan related protests

On 13th June 2021, thousands of Spaniards took to the streets in Madrid to protest the government's plans to pardon 12 Catalan politicians, who promoted a failed bid for Catalonian independence in 2017. The protest was attended by the heads of the conservative Popular Party (PP), far-right VOX party and the liberal Ciudadanos (Cs). Indications of the pardons made by Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez divided Spain into those who see them as a necessary step to improve relations with the region and those who see it as concessions to separatists who will continue seeking independence. The government sees the pardons as a bid to seek a solution to the ongoing Catalan crisis. No altercations or misconduct by the police were reported.

Protests against oil company

On 21stJune 2021, 100 climate activists from Rebelión por el Clima blocked the entrance to the Repsol research center in Móstoles, to condemn the oil company’s responsibility in the climate crisis, calling for it to cease its fossil fuel activities as soon as possible, and no later than 2040. In a statement, the group said that 30 activists were arrested during the action.

Expression

LGBTI legislation

On 18th May 2021, Spain's Congress of Deputies rejected a landmark legislative proposal that would have allowed legal gender recognition based on self-determination. The current process for changing gender markers on official documents is daunting for transgender people and does not recognise non-binary people. Transgender people can only change their gender on official documents if they have officially been diagnosed with gender dysphoria and have undergone at least two years of medical treatment to “adjust” their physical appearance to the gender with which they seek to identify. The proposed reform would have removed the requirement of medical evidence and would have allowed for non-binary gender markers on official documents. Additionally, it would have upheld the self-determination of children as the law would have granted children and adolescents access to legal gender recognition. According to the World Professional Association for Transgender Health, medical barriers for transgender people to gender recognition may cause harm to their physical and mental health insofar as some transgender people might turn to substance abuse or even suicide. Christian González Cabrera, researcher at Human Rights Watch condemned the status quo in Spain.

“Spain’s current procedure for legal gender recognition is onerous, inadequate, and out of tune with advances on gender identity in Europe and beyond.”

Later, on 29th June 2021, the government however approved a draft bill which would allow anyone over the age of 14, with the consent of a legal representative, to legally change their gender without medical proof and hormone therapy. However, those under the age of 14 would require judicial authorisation to legally change their gender. If the law passes through parliament, transgender people would be able to declare their gender by filing a form at a registry office and then confirm it three months later. However, some activists point out that the bill does not address the problems non-binary people face, with some feminist organisations opposing the bill.

Incidents against journalists

As reported by Mapping Media Freedom, on 28th April 2021, the entrance of the editorial offices of the monthly local newspaper El Mirall (The Mirror) in Barcelona was vandalised. Unidentified individuals wrote messages such as “dirty with lies” and threw orange paint around the entrance of the building. El Mirall is a free newspaper supported by the government of Catalonia.

As reported by Mapping Media Freedom, on 6th July 2021, the far-right Vox Party made a “veiled” threat against satirical magazine El Jueves, via Twitter, after it published several fiercely critical cartoons mocking the party’s leadership. The account published a photo of Ricardo Rodrigo Amar, who is head of the RBA editorial group that publishes El Jueves, claiming that his outlet publishes “hatred against millions of Spaniards on a daily basis”. It then called on people to express their anger at Rodrigo, referring to the city and street location of the magazine.

See the original article on Civicus Monitor.

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