EuroNews (English)

Germany to vote on law that would make it easier for people to change gender

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Euronews

German lawmakers are expected to vote on Friday on legislatio­n that would make it easier for transgende­r, intersex and nonbinary people to legally change their name and gender.

The "self-determinat­ion bill" would allow adults to change their name and gender at registry o ces.

The change would replace the existing "transsexua­l law" and mean that individual­s would no longer need to present a medical certi cate or obtain expert opinions to change gender, the German justice ministry said.

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Germany’s top court has struck down other parts of that 1980 law that required transgende­r people to get divorced and sterilised and to undergo gendertran­sition surgery.

Under the new legislatio­n, adults would need to notify registry o ces three months before making a change to their name and gender. They would have to wait one year before a new change.

Minors 14 years and older would be able to change their name and gender with the approval of their parents or guardians.

In the case of children younger than 14, parents or guardians would have to make registry of ce applicatio­ns on their behalf.

The new bill does not involve any revisions to Germany’s rules for gender-transition surgery. It also provides for operators of gyms and changing rooms for women to continue to decide who has access.

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'We nally want to make it easier'

Nyke Slawik, one of two transgende­r women who were elected as MPs in 2021, said ahead of the vote in Germany's lower house of parliament, the Bundestag, that the new rules would have saved her over a year of dealing with courts, seeking expert assessment­s and spending nearly €2,000.

“We nally want to make it easier," Slawik, a lawmaker with the Greens, one of the parties in the coalition government, told ARD television.

"Many other countries have gone this way, and Germany is simply following suit in signi - cantly simplifyin­g this registrati­on".

Among others, Spain’s parliament approved legislatio­n in 2023 that allows people aged 16 and up to change their gender on identity papers without medical advice.

The Scottish parliament passed a bill in 2022 that would allow people aged 16 or older to change the gender designatio­n on identity documents by self-declaratio­n.

That was vetoed by the UK government, a decision that Scotland’s highest civil court upheld in December.

The German cabinet approved the proposal for the selfdeterm­ination law last August.

At the time, Transgende­r Europe (TGEU), a nonpro t organisati­on, said that while the law was an "important step" there were some concerns.

Their recommenda­tions include removing the three-month waiting period and one-year block and allowing minors 14 and older to use the same procedure as adults.

 ?? ?? People hold a rainbow   ag as they attend the 45th Berlin Pride Parade for Christophe­r Street Day (CSD) in Berlin, Germany.
People hold a rainbow ag as they attend the 45th Berlin Pride Parade for Christophe­r Street Day (CSD) in Berlin, Germany.

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