Our Voices

TIME100: Indyra Mendoza and Claudia Spellmant

In countries throughout Latin America, transgender people are left with an impossible choice: stay and risk being killed, or leave everything behind. Vicky Hernández chose to stay, and paid for that decision with her life. Her murder during the 2009 Honduran coup d’état came to symbolize the pervasive structural violence that trans women continue to face to this day.

Indyra Mendoza and Claudia Spellmant, as activists and LGBTQ+ women themselves, spent years working to demand justice for Vicky, bravely pushing back against a discriminatory society that has repeatedly put their lives at risk. Our legal team at Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights joined them in this pursuit of justice.

The Inter-American Court, the region’s highest authority on human rights, heard their cries loud and clear. In a landmark decision issued this June, it not only held the state of Honduras responsible for Vicky’s death but also issued new protections for LGBTQ+ people across Latin America.

Indyra and Claudia understand well the fight isn’t over, and have pledged to keep pushing for the rights of their communities. The world must follow their lead.

Read the original article here.

New year, new us. Same mission.

Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights is rebranding to honor the legacy of our founder and hero, Mrs. Ethel Skakel Kennedy. From now on, we will proudly be known as the Robert & Ethel Kennedy Human Rights Center

While our name is changing, our mission and work remain the same. We will continue to fight injustice, advance human rights, and hold governments accountable around the world in 2026 and beyond.