The Disque 100 platform recorded more than 121,500 complaints of human rights violations from January to March of this year. The number appears in the Data Panel of the National Ombudsman for Human Rights (ONDH), which is now updated every three months, informed the Ministry of Human Rights and Citizenship. The vast majority of complaints concern threats and attacks on the physical or psychological integrity of victims, types of violation reported in 99,482 and 99,506 of the complaints received, respectively. Regarding gender, of the total number of complaints, 60.59% (73,897) have female victims as victims, most of them (4,068 complaints) in the 70-74 age group. This is the same age group as the highest number of complaints with male victims (1,897). Even so, the vulnerable group most affected in the first quarter, according to the ONDH panel, was children and adolescents, which corresponds to 36.4% (51,979) of the complaints. This occurs because, in this type of categorization, the grouping takes place by larger age groups. By this metric, elderly people were the second most affected, with 33,200 (23.25%) of the complaints. Confirming the rule since the data began to be collected, in the first quarter of this year most of the violations occurred in the house where the victim and the suspect live (57,416 complaints), followed by the victim’s house (36,352). Regarding the suspects, the majority of the complaints received, 44.91%, are male (54,838 complaints), with a prevalence in the age group between 40 and 40 years (7,537). No information was made available on the income range and schooling prevalent among those suspected of committing human rights violations. In the first three months of 2023, the Dial platform also received 1,761 complaints in which the victim is part of the LGBTQIA+ community. Most of these victims are gay male homosexuals (565), followed by female gay lesbians (380). News As explained by the ministry, the profile data of victims and suspects and other information about the complaints, such as the type of violation, were made available with the implementation of the SIC option – Access to Information, in the ONDH Data Panel, where they are made available open data obtained through Freedom of Information Act requests. “Now, in an open way, it is possible to access the profiles of victims and suspects, types of demands and analyze the complaints with a managerial view of the data that are demanded from the Ombudsman”, explained the general coordinator of the Dial Human Rights, Sidnei Costa, in a note released by the ministry. new periodicity and the option referring to the SIC bring more transparency to this process in which we want the active participation of all people, both denouncing violations and acting in the development and promotion of public policies”, he said.
Agência Brasil
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