People filmed trans woman drowning in ravine and told others ‘don’t help her’ | News World

Sara Millerey González was remembered as kind and charismatic (Picture: Facebook)

‘Sara Millerey González should still be alive.’

That is from Amnesty International on the murder of Sara, who was raped, had her legs and arms broken before being thrown into Colombian river.

On April 4, a trans woman was present in the La García ravine that winds through the Playa Rica neighbourhood of Bella.

Officials consider she was beaten by locals, possibly with ties to criminal gangs.

At about 3pm, Sara’s mother, Sandra Borja, received a phone call from her sister telling her that her daughter was drowning in a creek.

She found Sara clinging to a branch, the muddy waters of the river crashing against her back.

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto/Shutterstock (15252428f) Members of dissident collectives in Mexico City, Mexico, on April 13, 2025, protest outside the Colombian Embassy to demand justice for the transfemicide of Sara Millerey, a young Colombian woman murdered in Antioquia, Medellin, on April 4, in the community of Bello, according to local authorities. Dissident Collectives In Mexico City Carry Out Direct Action Outside The Colombian Embassy To Demand Justice For The Transfemicide Of Sara Millerey - 13 Apr 2025
A protest erupted on Sunday demanding justice for Sara (Picture: Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto/Shutters)

Moderately than help, a gaggle of locals were filming her plead for assistance on their phones.

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Those filming told passersby not to assist Sara, described by those that knew her as charismatic and all the time with a smile on her face, a relative told El Colombiano.

‘There have been some guys standing there, also with their cell phones recording what was happening to her, they usually said not to assist her,’ they recalled.

‘So there was fear of intervening for fear of being shot. It was mandatory for the police to intervene.’

‘Mum, I’m going to die’

The video went viral on social media. The clip, seen by Metro, appeared to point out someone in knee-high muddy water, her face visibly wounded, flailing around and unable to maneuver their arms.

‘My first response was to throw myself into the river,’ Sandra told EL PAÍS.

‘I shouted to her: “Sweetheart, sweetheart, hold tight, hold on to that branch!”‘

‘Mum, I’m going to die,’ Sara told Sandra.

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto/Shutterstock (15252428m) Members of dissident collectives in Mexico City, Mexico, on April 13, 2025, hold direct action outside the Colombian Embassy to demand justice for the transfemicide of Sara Millerey, a young Colombian woman murdered in Antioquia, Medellin, on April 4, in the community of Bello, according to local authorities. Dissident Collectives In Mexico City Carry Out Direct Action Outside The Colombian Embassy To Demand Justice For The Transfemicide Of Sara Millerey - 13 Apr 2025
The president said that Sara’s death shows there are ‘Nazis’ in Colombia (Picture: Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto/Shutters)

Sara was rescued by firefighters who brought her to La María Hospital in central Bello, but she died the next day, having developed hyperthermia. Her lungs were punctured and he or she suffered two cardiac arrests.

She was 32. Dozens attended her funeral on April 8.

The federal government has offered 50 million pesos (about £8,800) for details about Sara’s death.

Killing of trans woman an act of ‘fascism’

President Gustavo Petro described Sara’s death as ‘fascism’.

‘I’m criticised for speaking about Nazism. I do know perfectly well that fascism is the violent elimination of human differences: political, religious, ethnic, sexual freedom,’ he posted on X.

‘What happened in Bello known as fascism, because there are Nazis in Colombia.’

‘She was the victim of an atrocious and hateful act,’ added Bello Mayor Lorena González Ospina on X.

Ospina said that the video of Sara fighting for her life going viral underscores the ‘indifference’ some people have towards trans lives.

‘We cannot allow transphobia to maintain taking lives in silence,’ she said.

But some watching Sara can have desired to help but simply couldn’t, said Eliecer Sierra Torres, the CEO of the non-profit Friends of the World Foundation, told Metro.

‘Many witnesses observed helplessly what happened, paralysed by fear of suffering retaliation in the event that they tried to assist Sara,’ she said.

‘This reality of the armed conflict that persists in Colombia amplifies the vulnerability of already marginalised populations.’

‘We call on society and the media to lift awareness and never speculate or make a priori judgements that stigmatise trans women, avoiding narratives that label them as “deserving” of this violence,’ Torres added.

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto/Shutterstock (15252428n) Members of dissident collectives in Mexico City, Mexico, on April 13, 2025, hold direct action outside the Colombian Embassy to demand justice for the transfemicide of Sara Millerey, a young Colombian woman murdered in Antioquia, Medellin, on April 4, in the community of Bello, according to local authorities. Dissident Collectives In Mexico City Carry Out Direct Action Outside The Colombian Embassy To Demand Justice For The Transfemicide Of Sara Millerey - 13 Apr 2025
At the least 25 LGBTQ+ people have been killed in Colombia this 12 months (Picture: Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto/Shutters)

‘Hate speech normalises and perpetuates cycles of aggression that have to be eradicated.’

Barely 4 months into 2025, 25 LGBTQ+ people have been murdered in Colombia, including 15 trans people, in keeping with the monitoring group, the Spanish Human Rights Observatory.

While public support for gay, bisexual and lesbian rights is usually high in Colombia – with many pro-LGBTQ+ laws within the books – trans rights are usually not a lot, the LGBTQ+ rights service Equaldex says.

ILGA LAC (International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association for Latin America and the Caribbean) says that the country is seeing a ‘resurgence of systematic violence’.

‘The memory of Sara Millerey González and all victims of hate crimes,’ added Torres, ‘must motivate us to construct a more just and inclusive society.’

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