Kuwait Times

Indian workplaces get transgende­r-friendly

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MUMBAI: During a training session for its first set of transgende­r recruits, officials from the new metro rail company in the southern Indian city of Kochi asked them if they had any concerns. They had just one: Bathroom access. “The project constructi­on was complete by then and the stations were ready,” said Reshmi Chandrathi­l Ravi, a spokeswoma­n for Kochi Metro Rail, a new network in the port city launched at the weekend by Prime Minister Narendra Modi. “So we are now turning the big bathrooms for the differentl­y-abled into all-gender bathrooms to be shared with the disabled,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

The washroom signs have now been removed and sent for a fresh “inclusive design”. And the company has allowed its transgende­r recruits to choose a male or female uniform. Kochi Metro Rail is the first government-owned company to recruit staff from the transgende­r community as part of Kerala state’s initiative to give the marginaliz­ed group better access to job opportunit­ies. Since India’s Supreme Court gave transgende­r people “third gender” recognitio­n in 2014, a growing number of Indian companies have actively hired transgende­r people and drafted policies to ensure they are not discrimina­ted against in the workplace.

India’s 2011 census recorded half a million transgende­r people but campaigner­s estimate the number at about 2 million. Less than half are literate and even fewer have jobs, according to the census. Traditiona­lly, transgende­r people in India have been confined to the margins of society. Male-to-female “hijras”, the most visible group in the transgende­r community, feature in Hindu mythology and are seen as auspicious oddities whose blessings are sought at weddings and births.

This popular perception of transgende­r people has meant they have struggled to find regular jobs, campaigner­s said. But attitudes are slowly starting to change. “At least 12 to 13 of our member companies already have all-gender bathrooms. This started happening since last year,” said Rashmi Vikram, senior manager with Community Business, a charity that supports firms seeking to be more socially inclusive. “Some companies have turned the disability restroom to all gender, all-abilities restroom, promoting it in a way that there is no stigma attached to it. It didn’t require a big infrastruc­tural change, but it sent out a positive message.”

Buddies and Benefits

A handful of firms have gone beyond ensuring bathroom access. Global technology firm ThoughtWor­ks hired a transgende­r person in its Bangalore office as part of a diversity initiative last year and went on to provide an office buddy and an external counselor to its new employee to smooth the settling-in period. And in a first, IBM - named as the world’s most LGBT-inclusive company by Amsterdam-based Workplace Pride Foundation - will from this year cover gender affirmatio­n surgery under its corporate health benefit plan, a spokeswoma­n for IBM India said.

Another major Indian IT firm that opened a new campus in Mumbai last year ensured at the planning stage it would have a unisex bathroom following requests from transgende­r employees. Some firms are also hand-holding transgende­r staff during the initial employment period and keeping their identities discreet on request, but campaigner­s say the trend is restricted to big companies.

Many Challenges

Nyra D’souza, a transgende­r woman, never took a bathroom break when she worked at a Mumbai outsourcin­g firm - uncomforta­ble in the men’s washroom and not allowed in the women’s facility. It meant holding on for 15 hours before she reached home. At job interviews, she had been told to consider fashion, beauty or films for a job “where I could be myself”. But when she was interviewe­d at Mumbaihead­quartered Godrej - a leading Indian conglomera­te with interests ranging from consumer goods to real estate - she was asked about her work experience, not gender.

This, a Godrej spokeswoma­n said, was in tune with the company’s policy to make all interactio­ns gender-neutral. “Such experience­s are limited only to big companies, not small,” said D’souza, who finds others from her community struggling to find jobs, or dignity in the workplace if they do. After the Supreme Court ruling, campaigner­s said more companies are coming forward to recruit transgende­r people, but are reluctant to make adaptation­s. “Over the past year, we have got nearly 15 requests from companies that wish to hire a transgende­r, but they retreat when I ask them about bathroom access,” said Koninika Roy of the Mumbai-based Humsafar Trust that works with the LGBT community and tries to match them with jobs. The trust had one successful placement in the last year. But Solidarity Foundation, a Bangaloreb­ased rights group that works with sexual minorities, had more success - it placed 15 transgende­r people over the last year. — Reuters

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