The Daily Telegraph

Belgium pledges to introduce a third gender of ‘X’

New coalition government to allow citizens to pick the letter rather than male or female on identity cards

- By James Crisp in Brussels

BELGIUM plans to introduce the letter “X” as a third gender option on official documents, along with male or female.

The country’s new coalition government has pledged to be more inclusive since taking office last month. Rather than being forced to pick between male or female, citizens could instead pick the letter X as a non-binary option on their birth certificat­es and identity cards, under the proposed new rules.

“This is an ethically sensitive issue, I am aware of it,” Vincent Van Quickenbor­ne, the federal justice minister said. “So I want to involve parliament. I hope that the discussion can be done in all openness and freedom.”

The decision follows a Constituti­onal Court ruling last year, which found Belgium’s transgende­r laws were not inclusive enough. In 2017, a law was passed to allow people to change the gender assigned to them at birth on their birth certificat­es and official documents without having a psychologi­cal exam or operation. The Constituti­onal Court said that was restrictiv­e and discrimina­tory because people would still have to choose between ticking the male or female box on the documents.

The law must take into account a person’s right to self-determinat­ion and not retain binary masculine or feminine genders, the court said. A policy note released by Mr Van Quickenbor­ne said that “the legislatio­n on sex registrati­on will be amended to comply with the case law of the Constituti­onal Court”.

Belgium is one of the most liberal countries in Europe. In 2011, it became the first country in modern history to be led by an openly gay man, Elio Di Rupo. Petra De Sutter, the new deputy prime minster in the seven-party coalition government, is the highest ranking transgende­r politician in Europe.

The move in Belgium, which could face some opposition from conservati­ve parties outside of government, comes as countries across Europe move towards more liberal policies. Germany does not insist on a gender on its identity card, while in the Netherland­s, identifica­tion will not state whether or not the holder is male or female from 2025 at the latest.

The production of identity cards is due to be reviewed in that time, making the measure cost-effective. The law will still have to be changed to allow for the new arrangemen­ts.

The Dutch government has not yet made a decision on whether to apply the same changes to passports, although three Dutch citizens have an X on their passports after winning legal battles British judges warned the Home Office in March this year that its refusal to issue X passports could breach human rights in the future but was lawful for now. India, Nepal, Argentina, Australia, Canada, have introduced the gender ‘X’ in passports and identity cards.

But EU member state Poland has imposed a crackdown on LGBT+ rights, which has led to global criticism of Warsaw. Fifty ambassador­s wrote an open letter calling for an end to hostility towards gay and transgende­r rights in September after a string of towns declared themselves “Lgbt-free zones”.

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