In general, Palestinian society remains intolerant to same-sex relationships. Same-sex sexual relations are illegal in the Gaza Strip but not in the West Bank, which is the larger of the territories governed by the Palestinian Authority. The image on the right shows her in a video posted on December 12. The image on the left shows Mira in a video posted on December 3. They said, “You won’t be able to go home” and then they threatened us with their weapons… They told us that they were going to take us away to kill us, to execute us. Mira appeared on screen with a bandaged nose. The day after the attack Mira and another victim, Daniel, were interviewed by Israeli public television channel Kan. "They said that they were going to take us away to kill us, to execute us” Our social workers are in contact with her as well as with the hundreds of other people who we watch over. The assaillants broke her nose during the attack but she didn’t have any more serious injuries. She went to Ramallah for a nose operation because it is cheaper there.
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She was able to see a doctor here (in Israel) and lives in Jaffa. France 24 spoke with the director of the centre, Avihu Mizan: One of the three survivors of the violence is a transgender person who calls herself Mira and who originally hails from the Palestinian town of Hebron but is now living in the Jaffa neighborhood in Tel Aviv where she is in regular contact with the local LGBT centre.