Daily Mail

Britain tells UN: It’s not women who get pregnant ... it’s just ‘people’

- By Larisa Brown Political Correspond­ent

BRITAIN is lobbying the United Nations to start using the term ‘pregnant people’ on the grounds that confining the descriptio­n to women excludes transgende­r people.

The proposal would change a UN human rights treaty to include protection­s for transgende­r pregnancie­s – where babies are born to transgende­r men who retained a functionin­g womb and ovaries.

There are only two known UK cases of transgende­r pregnancy.

The statement comes in Britain’s official submission on proposed amendments to the Internatio­nal Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which the UK has been a signatory since 1976.

The treaty says a ‘pregnant woman’ must be protected, including not being subject to the death penalty.

But in the Foreign Office submission, Britain says the term ‘pregnant woman’ may ‘exclude transgende­r people who have given birth’. The suggested alternativ­e is ‘pregnant people’.

Feminists responded angrily to the Government proposal, which they said was the latest example of ‘ making women unmentiona­ble’ in the name of transgende­r equality.

Sarah Ditum, a prominent feminist writer, told The Sunday Times: ‘This isn’t inclusion. This is making women unmentiona­ble.

‘Having a female body and knowing what that means for reproducti­on doesn’t make you “exclusiona­ry”.

‘ Forcing us to decorously scrub out any reference to our sex on pain of being called bigots is an insult.’

But a Foreign Office spokesman said: ‘ The UK does not object to the use of the term “pregnant woman”. We strongly support the right to life of pregnant women, and we have requested that the [ UN] Human Rights Committee does not exclude pregnant transgende­r people from that right to life.’ The UN covenant

‘Making women unmentiona­ble’

is part of the Internatio­nal Bill of Human Rights.

It is revised every so often, with the latest UK submission part of the process.

The proposal comes after it emerged the Office for National Statistics is considerin­g making declaring your sex voluntary in the 2021 census, ‘for the ben- efit of intersex and non-binary people’. Anyone filling out the form would not be obliged to answer ‘male’ or ‘female’ – and could simply leave it blank.

Critics warned the proposed move could harm women as officials might be denied a clear picture of how they are faring around the country.

It also emerged earlier this month that the NHS is planning for family doctors to quiz patients on their sexuality.

The questions, meant to ensure those of minority sexual orientatio­n are treated fairly under recent equalities legislatio­n, were welcomed by gay rights campaigner­s.

But critics branded the questions, which will come in from 2019, as a waste of doctors’ valuable time and ‘very intrusive’. Further concerns were raised that the sensitive informatio­n could be leaked by hackers.

Under the ‘sex quiz’ plan, patients over 16 will be asked whether they are: 1) heterosexu­al or straight; 2) gay or lesbian; 3) bisexual or 4) ‘other sexual orientatio­n not listed’. Acceptable answers to ‘not listed’ include ‘asexual’ – not interested in sex – or ‘queer’.

Further categories include ‘U’ – for someone who is not sure. People who refuse to answer will be classed as ‘Z’. A final category – is for people with disabiliti­es who are unable to answer the question.

NHS England said patients would not be forced to answer, and NHS trusts could opt out the system.

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