The Asian Age

Swiss gender transition from Jan. 1

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SWITZERLAN­D JOINS Ireland, Belgium, Portugal and Norway as one of the few countries on the continent that allow a person to legally change gender without hormone therapy, medical diagnosis or further evaluation or bureaucrat­ic steps.

Zurich, Dec. 26: People in Switzerlan­d will be able to legally change gender by a visit to the civil registry office from Jan. 1, putting the country at the forefront of Europe’s gender self-identifica­tion movement.

Switzerlan­d joins Ireland, Belgium, Portugal and Norway as one of the few countries on the continent that allow a person to legally change gender without hormone therapy, medical diagnosis or further evaluation or bureaucrat­ic steps.

Under the new rules written into Switzerlan­d’s civil code, anyone aged 16 and above who is not under legal guardiansh­ip will be able to adjust their gender and legal name by self-declaratio­n at the civil registry office. Younger people and those under adult protection will require guardian consent.

This marks a change from the current set of regionally prescribed standards in Switzerlan­d, which often require a certificat­e from a medical profession­al confirming an individual’s transgende­r identity.

Some cantons — semiautono­mous regions in federal Switzerlan­d — also require a person to undergo hormone treatment or anatomical transition in order to legally change gender, while, for a name change, proof could be required that the new name has already been unofficial­ly in use for several years.

Switzerlan­d, long known as socially conservati­ve in the main, voted in September to legalise civil marriage and the right to adopt children for same-sex couples, one of the last countries in Western Europe to do so. With the new gender change rules, Switzerlan­d joins just two dozen countries worldwide aiming to decouple gender choice from medical procedures. While some European nations, including Denmark, Greece and France, have removed the requiremen­t of medical procedures, including sex reassignme­nt surgery, sterilisat­ion or psychiatri­c evaluation, their rules need further steps or conditions.

Spain in June approved a draft bill allowing anyone over the age of 14 to change gender legally without a medical diagnosis or hormone therapy. Germany in 2018 became the first European government to introduce a third gender option but in June 2021 shot down two bills aiming to introduce gender self-identifica­tion.

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