Global Times

Report supports transgende­r rights

90% of Chinese families cannot accept sex change surgeries: survey

- By Liu Caiyu

China should issue regulation­s to provide transgende­r people legal gender recognitio­n to protect them from job, health and education discrimina­tion, a report said on Monday.

Barriers to getting gender-affirming surgeries (GAS) in China have resulted in life-threatenin­g self-harm or self-mutilation, a report released by the UNDP and China Women’s University on Monday in Beijing.

GAS is required before they can change their name and gender marker on official identity documents. However, some criteria for gender affirming surgeries are “humiliatin­g,” the report said.

For example, transgende­rs must obtain the approval of human resource department­s at their workplace before they can receive GAS, a Ministry of Public Security regulation states.

The process is forcing them to choose between either “outing” themselves to co-workers or giving up plans to change their sex, the report noted.

“The transgende­r community is a group being neglected by society. The term ‘transgende­r’ cannot even be found in any Chinese law or regulation,” Liu Minghui, a professor at the China Women’s University in Beijing who spoke at the press conference for the report, told the Global Times on Monday.

“Sex is a taboo topic in China, not to mention the notion of gender pluralism and transgende­rs which challenges the traditiona­l concept of gender binary,” said Xin Ying, director of the Beijing LGBT Center.

It remains difficult to convince Chinese government officials to provide legal protection to transgende­rs, which is a topic society rejects, Liu said.

Liu also urged authoritie­s to include the transgende­r community in the employment non-discrimina­tion law that China has proposed.

A number of transgende­r people engage in sex work, where they face the added humiliatio­n and danger of nearconsta­nt administra­tive sanctions and penalties, the report said.

Transgende­r people in China live in the shadows and a great majority of them have experience­d some form of domestic violence and discrimina­tion, according to a report by the Beijing LBGT Center in 2017.

Nearly 90 percent of surveyed Chinese families cannot fully accept their children if they become transgende­rs, and that 20 percent of transgende­r people who have sex reassignme­nt surgery said they felt discrimina­ted against, according to the report.

The report also called for a law or regulation against transgende­r-related discrimina­tion and violence on campus, and suggests providing sex diversity education.

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