Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

CISF cop who changed sex for love gets accepted as a man

- Faizan Haidar

NEWDELHI: The Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) has officially recognised as male a constable who underwent a sex change surgery to beat laws that don’t allow gay marriages in India.

Ignoring the taunts of fellow workers, the 29-year-old married a woman colleague after the operation six year ago that has left him with all the visible features of a man – a muscular body, a moustache and a deep baritone.

In February, three medical boards of the CISF, Central Reserve Police Force and All India Institute of Medical Sciences cleared him as a male officer after four years of bureaucrat­ic vacillatio­n in absence of a precedence and multiple fitness and gender tests. HT is not revealing the identity of the man to protect his privacy.

“We have intimated Ministry for Home Affairs after medical boards set up by us declared the constable a male. The issue was pending for four years but we have taken a decision now. In our record he is now a male constable,” OP Singh, CISF DG, said.

But it was not an easy victory for the constable who hails from Bihar and joined the force as a woman in 2008. To convince the bosses of his masculinit­y, the constable endured multiple medical tests and tough physical exercises that are reserved for male staff. Raising funds for surgery and the painful hormonal injections he took daily were other challenges.

He took out a loan for the yearlong sex-change operation that cost him about ₹10 lakh.

All this to beat India’s Britishera laws that make gay sex and marriage a crime. The laws, which are now being challenged in Supreme Court, don’t address sex-change.

“Had same-sex marriage been allowed in India I would have not undergone sex-change. I knew society will make fun of me but I was ready to face the challenge,” he told HT.

“Since my childhood I always treated myself as a boy and had decided not to marry ever because in that case I would have to marry a man. But I got selected in CISF and decided that I will never go back to my hometown as people would force me to marry.”

At work, he was treated just as another woman constable, giving rise to piquant situations.

“I was posted for frisking duty of female passengers in Delhi metro. I was hesitant and told my seniors I should not be doing this as I consider myself a male,” he said. But his women colleagues did not consider him a woman and complained against sharing their barracks with him.

“In May 2012 my operation was completed, and I applied in the force for gender change. Though no decision was made I got married in 2013. Some colleagues teased me but I ignored them,” he added.

CISF officials now have a challenge in deciding the man’s next posting, including whether he could be given the work of frisking male passengers.

“It was important for us to ensure that he has all the criteria required for a male constable,” said a CISF official.

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