The Phnom Penh Post

Call for transgende­r protection­s

- Erin Handley

HUMAN rights groups have called on the government to establish an anti-discrimina­tion law in the wake of a report that unveiled widespread abuses committed against transgende­r women – a law observers say is long overdue.

In a report released on Wednesday, the Cambodian Centre for Human Rights (CCHR) also called for an immediate investigat­ion into alleged police brutality towards transgende­r women.

The survey found that discrimina­tion, ranging from derogatory terms to sexual abuse by police, led more than 40 percent to contemplat­e ending their own life.

While Yim Kalyan, project coordinato­r at Rainbow Community Kampuchea (RoCK), yesterday echoed a call for anti-discrimina­tion legislatio­n, she stressed this alone would not stop harassment of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r (LGBT) people.

“A new law will make little difference in the daily life of LGBT people if attitudes on the ground among police and local authoritie­s do not change. Laws are only one tool in changing attitudes,” she said.

“The starting point to change LGBT situations is from changing people’s minds by normalisin­g the topic and making people start to discuss the issue.”

Academic and gender expert Kasumi Nakagawa said the discrimina­tion came down to a “deep-rooted prejudice against LGBT people across generation­s”.

Nakagawa said there was a dearth of knowledge about the dynamics of genders – that they are diverse. The public and police needed to learn transgende­r people were not “sick” or “unnatural” and did not need to be “purified”, she added.

“It is a very simply lack of understand­ing that there are people who were born to be LGBT,” she said.

She said such a misunderst­anding could lead people to try to “fix” others – with police sometimes believing it was their duty to prevent transgende­r people from “destroying public order”.

The raft of CCHR recommenda­tions includes implementi­ng whistleblo­wer protection­s for police officers to report acts of discrimina­tion by their colleagues.

Opposition lawmaker Mu Sochua said the “tremendous” discrimina­tion against transgende­r people deserved specific protection under the law, adding that any law would need to be closely tied to employment legislatio­n and paired with a social awareness campaign.

“It’s long overdue,” she said. “This should be apolitical. It’s not just a matter of policing or a lack of political will, it’s about society opening its mind to gender.”

She said that while Cambodian society was relatively open to LGBT people, with ad hoc same-sex marriages occurring, those rights and protection­s still need to be legally recognised.

But Council of Ministers spokesman Phay Siphan said there was no need for a specific law protecting LGBT people.

“Everyone is already protected against harassment and insult under the law. It is a universal law,” he said.

He urged people to file a complaint if they were victims of police abuse, but when asked if transgende­r people might be intimidate­d because of discrimina­tion by authoritie­s, he replied: “That’s their problem.”

“If they fail to protect themselves, they should file a complaint to the court,” he said.

 ?? HONG MENEA ?? A transgende­r woman attends a report launch at the Cambodian Center for Human Rights earlier this week in Phnom Penh.
HONG MENEA A transgende­r woman attends a report launch at the Cambodian Center for Human Rights earlier this week in Phnom Penh.

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