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Pakistan's transvestites to get distinct gender |
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ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Pakistan's Supreme Court ordered authorities on Wednesday to allow transvestites and eunuchs to identify themselves as a distinct gender as part of a move to ensure their rights, a lawyer said.
Known by the term "hijra" in conservative Muslim Pakistan, transvestites, eunuchs and hermaphrodites are generally shunned by society.
They often live together in slum communities and survive by begging and dancing at carnivals and weddings. Some are also involved in prostitution.
Iftikhar Chaudhry, chief justice of Pakistan, ordered the government to give national identity cards to members of the community showing their distinct gender and to take steps to ensure that they were not harassed.
"The government's registration authority has been directed to include a separate column in national identity cards showing them as hijras," Mohammad Aslam Khaki, a lawyer for hijras told Reuters.
"By doing so, they think they will get a distinct identity and it will help them get their rights."
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Equal Benefits for Trans People in Pakistan? |
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Though homosexuality is criminalized in Pakistan with penalties ranging from fines to imprisonment to death by stoning, the Pakistani Supreme Court ruled this week that trans citizens should have greater access to benefits and equal rights. It's a welcome development, for a country that along with Egypt, Libya, Sudan, and Iran have fought to portray LGBT rights as a western concept imposed on countries around the world by an immoral and extravagent western world.
Still, good ruling aside, this doesn't necessarily mean the end of persecution for trans folks in Pakistan. But first, here's a summary of the Supreme Court in Islamabad's ruling:
The Supreme Court has ordered that trans people, being equal citizens of Pakistan, should also benefit from the federal and provincial governments' financial support schemes...
'They are citizens of Pakistan and enjoy the same protection guaranteed under Article four (rights of individuals to be dealt with in accordance of law) and Article nine (security of person) of the Constitution,' ruled a three-member bench comprising Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry, Justice Muhammad Sair Ali and Justice Jawwad S Khawaja.
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Life's a drag act for the TV presenter challenging homophobia in Pakistan |
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Thursday, 17 December 2009 07:53 |
Arifa Akbar meets the unlikely celebrity forcing an intolerant society to confront its prejudices
A finely groomed woman in a sparkling turquoise sari sashays through the doors of Asia House to rapturous applause. Her sari twinkles under the glare of TV cameras and a queenly smile breaks through heavy face-powder. She bows to the audience of British Asians and Pakistani embassy dignitaries, then looks Wajid Shamsul Hassan, the high commissioner, squarely in the eye. "I'm so sorry I'm late, my dears, but this," she says, casting her hand over her face and outfit, "took two hours. The pressures of being a woman: men expect so much from us."
Some of the audience titters. This impeccably dressed guest, was introduced as Begum Nawazish Ali, the stately widow of an army colonel, and he is Pakistani's first television transvestite. Begum, otherwise known as Ali Saleem, is a 30-year-old television presenter who has made a name for himself as Pakistan's first open bisexual, a highly transgressive act in a country where overt homosexuality is banned under sharia law.
His show has become a flagship series for Aaj channel, and he has gained an unlikely fan-club of Pakistani politicians, film stars and army dignitaries in Pakistan who tune in or turn up as guests to his Dame Edna Everage-style chat show every week.
The show is not meant to be a comedy act, Saleem says, although his act in London is peppered with risqué jokes. "I'm the only queen Pakistan really has; there is no competition. My heart is just like the army, open to all men between the ages of 18 and 65. The Taj Mahal is man's greatest erection for a woman."
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Last Updated on Sunday, 27 December 2009 02:54 |
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