Rallying hatred
The day after Georgia banned ‘LGBT propaganda’, the country’s best-known transgender woman was brutally murdered

On 17 September the Georgian Parliament passed a package of 19 laws which, according to the ruling Georgian Dream party, were aimed at promoting “family values” and the “protection of minors”, but in actual fact were a set of deeply repressive and homophobic measures aimed at mobilising support from the country’s ultraconservative far right.
As well as introducing a specific ban on same-sex marriage, same-sex adoption, and providing gender reassignment surgery, the law makes the dissemination of so-called “LGBT propaganda” and the promotion of queer identities in schools and the media an offence.
A day after the law was passed, Georgia’s best known transgender woman was brutally murdered, underscoring the huge amount of damage the legislation is likely to wreak on queer lives in the South Caucasus nation.
An increasing number of Georgians now worry that the policies of Georgian Dream may end up depriving them of visa-free travel to Europe, one of the hard-won benefits of Georgia’s years-long association with the EU.

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