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Pakistan: Transgender rights in spotlight amid religious backlash

  • September 23, 2022

A law that provides legal recognition to transgender persons and prohibits discrimination and harassment, has stirred a new debate in the conservative South Asian country where homosexuality is a crime.

The Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Act of 2018 guarantees citizens their right to self-identify as male, female or a blend of both genders, and to have their identity officially registered on all official documents, including passports, national identification cards, driving licenses and educational certificates.

Though the act was passed by parliament in May 2018, new debates on social media have resurfaced in recent weeks, with critics opposing a specific clause that stipulates that “a transgender person shall have a right to be recognized as per his or her self-perceived gender identity.”

Religious party files petition

Clerics have condemned the clause, prompting Senator Mushtaq Ahmad Khan from the Jamat-e-Islami, a religious political party in Pakistan, to file a petition in the Federal Shariat Court. The court is separate from civil courts and has the authority to examine whether certain laws comply with Islam.

“The provision in which the transgender applicants were given an option under this act to mention their particular gender must be amended and it should be decided after the medical board,” Senator Khan told DW. “Permitting gender change is a controversial thing in the act and could be used multiple times for certain motives,” he said.

Earlier in November 2021, Khan proposed the amendment in the senate but it was opposed by then Human Rights Minister Shireen Mazari.

Azam Nazir Tarar, federal minister of law and justice, says the act was passed to “protect the marginalized transgender community, and give them rights to education, inheritance, health care and employment.”

Tarar told DW that the law was passed unanimously by all the political parties following a consultation with the Council of Islamic Ideology, a constitutional body responsible for giving legal advice on Islamic issues to the government.

Pakistan’s transgender community still marginalized

Pakistan’s Supreme Court in 2009 ruled that transgender people, often known as hijras in the region, could obtain national identity cards as a “third sex.” In practice, however, transgender people in the Islamic nation are still widely marginalized and face regular discrimination in education and at work.

Pakistan’s 2017 national census estimated the number of transgender citizens in the country to be about 10,000, but rights groups have claimed the figure to be more than 300,000 in the country’s total population of 220 million people.

“Before this Act, the laws of Pakistan primarily recognized just two genders, and those who did not fall in either had to stick to the gender determined at birth which resulted in discrimination in school admissions, jobs, opening an account etc,” senior human rights jurist Osama Malik told DW. “This law is one step towards bringing them (transgender people) at par with male and female citizens of the country.” 

Rights activists and prominent members of Pakistan’s transgender community hailed the bill in 2018 as an important step forward. Activists are now concerned the bill is under threat and that not enough action has been taken by the Pakistani government to enforce equality for transgender persons.

  • Dancing despite fear – Pakistan’s cross-dressing men

    Dancer by night

    When night falls in the city of Rawalpindi, Waseem starts to dance. The 27-year-old acts as a “hijra,” the third gender. Estimates suggest thousands of them live in Pakistan. They are especially popular as dancers at weddings or baby showers because their prayers are deemed very effective. However, these are the only occasions they are truly accepted.

  • Dancing despite fear – Pakistan’s cross-dressing men

    Different in daylight

    During the day, Waseem sells cell phone accessories in an alleyway shop. His colleagues or friends know next to nothing about his nightly life.

  • Dancing despite fear – Pakistan’s cross-dressing men

    Turning into Rani, the dancer

    For Waseem, leading this double life serves mainly as a way to achieve a better life: “Being a dancer helps me to earn much more money than working in a shop,” he says. For true hijras, life is a constant fight. Those who can’t work as dancers, in many cases drift off into prostitution. All of them – even Waseem – face harassment and abuse.

  • Dancing despite fear – Pakistan’s cross-dressing men

    United in loneliness

    Many orthodox believers hate these “creatures between men and women”. Radical Islamists attack them in public. That’s why the hijras shy away and live in a close-knit community. “Eyes follow me when I walk out of the apartment,” says 43-year-old Bakhtawar. “Being with other dancers is like being with a family. When I am surrounded by them, I feel safe, respected and empowered.”

  • Dancing despite fear – Pakistan’s cross-dressing men

    Showing their true selves

    Many hijras fled from these stares to the anonymity of a big city, keeping their true self from colleagues or family. However, Pakistani law is rather progressive in this regard: In 2011, a Supreme Court ruling officially recognized the third gender. Hijras can now tick it off in their passports, are allowed to vote, open a bank account and work legally – helping some get away from prostitution.

  • Dancing despite fear – Pakistan’s cross-dressing men

    Standing up for equality

    For the first time, transgender people like Bindiya Rana (pictured on the right) ran for the country’s parliament during elections held in 2013. Although she didn’t get into parliament, she has kept fighting for equality and an end to discrimination. New laws have so far not succeeded in bringing any major change to the public mindset in the conservative Pakistani society.

  • Dancing despite fear – Pakistan’s cross-dressing men

    Living a double life

    Even today, only few transgenders are openly presenting their identity with such pride as Amjad. “The only thing that I can’t do is conceive babies,” the 44-year-old says.

    Author: Monika Griebeler


“We were happy that there will be change in our lives, but the benefits of the act have not been attained yet and we are facing another hurdle,” Bindiya Rana, an activist for transgender people, told DW. 

The 2018 Act has been declared by religious zealots as a clandestine attempt to allow same sex unions.  

Jurist Malik said: “This legislation is a revolutionary step towards providing inheritance rights to transgender citizens, and to provide them with discrimination free health care treatment, access to education and jobs. The entire act has no mention of transgender marriage.”

Farzana Bari, a women’s rights activist, told DW that the “landmark bill” had “given gender identity to the vulnerable transgender community and now a useless plea of reversing the gender identity has been filed by the clerics with the very invalid argument.”

In Pakistan, transgender persons are often abandoned by mainstream society. Many live in secluded communities and are forced into sex work, begging or dancing to make ends meet, and find themselves vulnerable to attacks.

“We have only the option to sing and dance, and we have been attacked across the country. In the last seven years, nearly 100 transgender people were killed in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province alone,” said activist Rana. “We demand the fair census of transgender people in Pakistan and urge authorities to not link our rights issue with religion.”

Edited by: Sou-Jie van Brunnersum

Article source: https://www.dw.com/en/pakistan-transgender-rights-in-spotlight-amid-religious-backlash/a-63220427?maca=en-rss-en-all-1573-rdf

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