The Standard (St. Catharines)

Chile families fight for acceptance of transgende­r children

Despite resistance, landmark decision helps push for greater gender registrati­on changes

- EVA VERGARA

SANTIAGO, Chile — Monica Flores was returning from a holiday abroad when Chilean police stopped her for questions at the airport. They were bothered that their records didn’t match: She had left the country with a son and returned with a daughter.

Flores had to explain that her six-year-old registered as a boy identifies as a girl.

“It was a distressin­g moment. I realized that it was urgent that the different institutio­ns of our country could be trained about trans issues to avoid having children undergo these questionin­gs,” Flores said.

The uncomforta­ble incident two years ago, led Flores and her exhusband to launch a legal battle for the rights of their daughter — a struggle that has encouraged the families of other trans children to demand greater acceptance and that has fed the broader debate about gender rights in a country so socially conservati­ve that it legalized divorce just 13 years ago.

The family’s efforts led to a landmark decision last year when a judge ordered officials at the civil registry to change the child’s name and gender on her birth certificat­e — a first for someone so young in Chile.

“This girl’s case touched my heart. I couldn’t allow her to continue living in the wrong body before society,” Judge Luis Fernandez, who ruled in favour of the child, told the newspaper La Tercera in the only interview that he has granted about the case.

At least five other, similar requests for gender registrati­on changes have been filed for minors since Fernandez’s decision.

The centre-left government itself has been pushing an array of measures for gender rights, ranging from decriminal­izing some abortions under legislatio­n upheld by the constituti­onal Court to demanding greater acceptance for transgende­r people in general and children in particular.

The Education Ministry issued a directive in May urging schools nationwide to protect the sexual orientatio­n and gender identity of student. The anti-bullying measure urges schools to identify the trans children by their preferred gender. The country’s Catholic schools associatio­n has promised to resist the measure.

More broadly, the government is backing a bill that would give adults the right to change the official records of their gender, though the measure has stalled in Congress, facing challenges from the Roman Catholic church and other traditiona­l forces.

Even with the measure still in limbo, a Santiago appellate court in June accepted a transgende­r adult’s right to change the registry. It said “every person has the right to the free developmen­t of their personalit­y in accordance with their own determinat­ion of gender.”

The bill before congress initially would have covered children like Flores’s daughter, though that was stripped out of the bill after meeting even stiffer resistance. Some doubts came from Chile’s associatio­n of endocrinol­ogists, which expressed support for letting adults make such legal changes, but said it was premature to do so in childhood, when the body and brain are still developing and when gender identity can sometimes shift with puberty.

 ?? ESTEBAN FELIX/AP ?? Monica Flores combs her daughter’s hair at their home in Santiago, Chile. Flores was questioned by Chilean police at the airport because the records didn’t match: she had left on holidays abroad with a son and returned to the country with a daughter...
ESTEBAN FELIX/AP Monica Flores combs her daughter’s hair at their home in Santiago, Chile. Flores was questioned by Chilean police at the airport because the records didn’t match: she had left on holidays abroad with a son and returned to the country with a daughter...

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