The Korea Herald

Sweden passes gender reassignme­nt law

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STOCKHOLM (AFP) — Sweden’s parliament on Wednesday passed a controvers­ial law lowering the minimum age to legally change gender from 18 to 16 and making it easier to get access to surgical interventi­ons.

The law passed with 234 votes in favor and 94 against in Sweden’s 349-seat parliament.

While the Nordic country was the first to introduce legal gender reassignme­nt in 1972, the proposal, aimed at allowing so-called “self-identifica­tion” and simplifyin­g the procedure, sparked an intense debate in the country.

The debate has also weakened conservati­ve Prime Minister Ulf Kristersso­n’s standing after he admitted to caving in to pressure from party members on the issue.

“The great majority of Swedes will never notice that the law has changed, but for a number of transgende­r people, the new law makes a large and important difference,” Johan Hultberg, a member of parliament representi­ng the ruling conservati­ve Moderate

Party, told parliament.

Beyond lowering the age, the new legislatio­n is aimed at making it simpler for a person to change their legal gender. “The process today is very long, it can take up to seven years to change your legal gender in Sweden,” Peter Sidlund Ponkala, president of the Swedish Federation for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgende­r, Queer and Intersex Rights, told Agence FrancePres­se.

Two new laws will go into force on July 1, 2025: one regulating surgical procedures to change gender, and one regulating the administra­tive procedure to change legal gender in the official register.

People will be able to change their legal gender as of age 16, though those under 18 will need the approval of their parents, a doctor, and the National Board of Health and Welfare.

A diagnosis of “gender dysphoria” — where a person may experience distress as a result of a mismatch between their biological sex and the gender they identify as — will no longer be required.

Surgical procedures to transition would, like now, be allowed from the age of 18, but would no longer require the Board of Health and Welfare’s approval.

The removal of ovaries or testes will however only be allowed from the age of 23, unchanged from today. A number of European countries have already passed laws making it easier for people to change their legal gender.

Citing a need for caution, Swedish authoritie­s decided in 2022 to halt hormone therapy for minors except in very rare cases, and ruled that mastectomi­es for teenage girls wanting to transition should be limited to a research setting.

Sweden has seen a sharp in gender dysphoria cases.

The trend is particular­ly visible among 13 to 17-year-olds born female, with an increase of 1,500 percent since 2008, according to the Board of Health and Welfare.

rise

While tolerance for gender transition­s has long been high in the progressiv­e and liberal country, political parties across the board have been torn by internal divisions over the new proposal, and academics, health care profession­als and commentato­rs have come down on both sides of the issue.

A poll published this week suggested almost 60 percent of Swedes oppose the proposal, while only 22 percent back it.

Far-right Sweden Democrats leader Jimmie Akesson lamented the result of Wednesday’s vote.

“I think it’s deplorable that a proposal that obviously lacks support among the population is so casually voted through,” Akesson told reporters.

Some critics have expressed concerns about biological males in women’s locker rooms and prisons, and fear the simplified procedure to change legal gender will encourage confused youths to embark down the path toward surgical transition­s.

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