Cape Times

Vietnamese singer takes world’s top trans beauty title

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PATTAYA: Vietnam’s Nguyen Huong Giang was crowned “Miss Internatio­nal Queen” in Thailand at one of the world’s top beauty pageants for transgende­r women.

The red-dressed winner, a singer, fended off 26 competitor­s, from countries spanning Mongolia to Mexico, to clinch the coveted crown in the seaside town of Pattaya, where the popular contest has been running since 2004.

While the competitio­n is fierce, contestant­s say the pageant also offers an opportunit­y for camaraderi­e among trans women who hail from different background­s but share similar stories of discrimina­tion back home.

Ahead of the coronation at the weekend, the diverse group of competitor­s packed into a bustling dressing room to apply their lipstick and primp their hair as an army of stylists buzzed around them.

“This is my first internatio­nal experience of coming to a pageant where it is really a big exposure to all my trans sisters all over the world,” said Nitasha Biswas from India, after making the final adjustment­s to a sparkling beige dress.

Thailand’s relatively openminded attitude on LGBTI issues also offers a refuge for contestant­s from less tolerant countries, including neighbouri­ng Myanmar.

“Myanmar is a developing country so there is still only a small number of transgende­r people,” said Juana Paing, a contestant from the poor and conservati­ve nation.

“I want to try my best for Myanmar to be more open for transgende­rs,” she added.

Thailand has a large and visible transgende­r population and is one of the world’s top destinatio­ns for sex-reassignme­nt surgery.

Yet some segments of society remain deeply conservati­ve.

Despite high levels of education, many transgende­r people struggle to secure full-time work in profession­s outside the entertainm­ent and sex industries.

Same-sex marriage is also still not legally recognised, and up until 2012, transgende­rs were considered mentally ill by the army.

Vietnam, where this year’s pageant winner comes from, has seen a growing LGBTI scene in recent years, while its communist government is drafting a landmark law that could allow some trans people to legally change their gender.

Joe Wong, who works with the advocacy group Asia Pacific Transgende­r Network, applauded contests like Miss Internatio­nal Queen as a “powerful medium to showcase the challenges, talents and hopes of trans people”.

“I’ve learnt from others that contests like these create sisterhood and bonds,” he said, adding that the pageants would, however, benefit from a more inclusive definition of beauty. – AFP

 ?? Picture: EPA/African News Agency (ANA) ?? WINNER: Newly crowned Vietnam’s Nguyen Huong Giang waves after winning the annual transgende­r beauty contest Miss Internatio­nal Queen 2018 in Pattaya, Thailand.
Picture: EPA/African News Agency (ANA) WINNER: Newly crowned Vietnam’s Nguyen Huong Giang waves after winning the annual transgende­r beauty contest Miss Internatio­nal Queen 2018 in Pattaya, Thailand.
 ?? Pictures: Reuters/African News Agency (ANA) ?? DRESSED UP:
Pictures: Reuters/African News Agency (ANA) DRESSED UP:
 ??  ?? BEAUTY QUEENS: Contestant Nguyen Huong Giang of Vietnam flanked by runner-ups as she is crowned winner of the Miss Internatio­nal Queen 2018 transgende­r beauty pageant.
BEAUTY QUEENS: Contestant Nguyen Huong Giang of Vietnam flanked by runner-ups as she is crowned winner of the Miss Internatio­nal Queen 2018 transgende­r beauty pageant.

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