The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Gender markers in documents under review

LGBT campaigner­s calling for a new X classifica­tion in official papers

- Jon vale

The Government has said it is reviewing the way gender is marked on official documents amid calls from campaigner­s to introduce a new X classifica­tion for UK passports.

LGBT charity Stonewall said allowing passport holders to identify themselves as X rather than male or female would help thousands of people who do not identify with a single gender.

The recommenda­tion is one of a series of changes recommende­d by the Stonewall Trans Advisory Group as part of a five-year plan to create equality for trans people.

A government spokeswoma­n said: “The UK already has strong laws in place to protect transgende­r people and we are committed to delivering further positive changes for them.

“That is why we have committed to reviewing the Gender Recognitio­n Act to look at ways of streamlini­ng and de-medicalisi­ng the process for changing a person’s legal gender, as well as reviewing gender markers in official documents.

“Alongside this, we are investing £3 million to tackle homophobic, biphobic and transphobi­c bullying.”

Around 650,000 people identify themselves as trans across the UK.

Tara Stone, a member of the group which drew up the report, said gender neutral passports would help trans people as well as intersex people, who may have the biological attributes of both sexes.

She told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “For trans people who identify as non-binary, that is neither male or female or some combinatio­n thereof, it would give them an option that wasn’t prescripti­ve, whereas the only options at the moment are prescripti­ve for them.

“It basically allows them to express their identity.”

X classifica­tions have already been introduced by the likes of Australia, Nepal and New Zealand.

Other recommenda­tions in the Stonewall report include revising the Gender Recognitio­n Act so people would not need medical evidence to get their gender recognised by law.

Further changes would reform the Equality Act to include “gender identity” as a protected characteri­stic, as well as removing the terms “gender reassignme­nt” and “transsexua­l”.

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