The Scottish Mail on Sunday

FURY AT BBC SEX CHANGE SHOW FOR 6-YEAR-OLDS

Parents slam ‘damaging’ inf luence on young minds

- By Sanchez Manning

THE BBC has been accused of acting recklessly after targeting children as young as six with a programme about a schoolboy who takes sex-change drugs.

Parents are angry that the show, available on the CBBC website, features a transgende­r storyline inappropri­ate for their children.

And concerned campaigner­s said it could ‘sow the seeds of confusion’ in young minds. The programme,

Just A Girl, depicts an 11-year-old’s struggle to get hormones that stunt puberty, making it easier to have sex-change surgery in the future.

One mother, writing on the Mumsnet website, said her daughter had become worried after seeing the video. She said her girl, who likes wearing boys’ clothes and playing football, had ‘asked me, anxiously, if that means she was a boy’.

Tory MP Peter Bone said: ‘It beggars belief that the BBC is making this programme freely available to children as young as six. I entirely share the anger of parents who just want to let children be children.

‘It is completely inappropri­ate for such material to be on the CBBC website and I shall be writing to BBC bosses to demand they take it down as soon as possible.’

Former Culture Secretary Maria Miller voiced her concerns over the BBC tackling the subject in ‘an ageappropr­iate way’, saying such issues should be raised ‘where children can have support from parents’.

And Tory MP Julian Brazier said: ‘This programme is very disappoint­ing and inappropri­ate. Children are very impression­able and this is going to confuse and worry them.’

Family campaigner Norman Wells said: ‘It is irresponsi­ble of the BBC to introduce impression­able children as young as six to the idea that they can choose to be something other than their biological sex.’

Just A Girl is the fictional video diary of a child who calls herself ‘Amy’ and dresses as a girl. It is hosted on the CBBC website, aimed at children aged between six and 12.

In the half-hour programme, Amy – played by an actress – reveals she was born a boy called Ben but has already started using pubertyhal­ting drugs.

Such hypothalam­ic blockers provoked

‘This will confuse and worry young children’ My 7 year old daughter is currently watching ‘Just a Girl’ on CBBC. This seems to be a dramatisat­ion about a pre-teen, transgende­r girl – so born a boy, but living as a girl. Also either currently or looking into taking hormone blockers. AIBU* to think this is an inappropri­ate topic for a young age group? *AM I BEING UNREASONAB­LE I’d turn it off. Don’t th it’s remotely suitable a 7 year old. I’d comp about it too. Showing this sort of thing normalises somethin consider child abuse.

a furore two years ago when The Mail on Sunday revealed an NHS clinic was willing to give them to children as young as nine.

Critics cited research claiming that most teenagers confused about their gender never go through with surgery, with many realising they

are gay. The BBC row comes amid growing controvers­y over gender issues, fuelled by a number of highprofil­e cases. In one, a Christian couple were threatened with having their 14-year-old daughter taken away because they oppose her plans to become a boy.

In another, a seven-year-old boy was ordered to be removed from his mother’s care as ‘she was raising him as female’, causing him ‘a great deal of emotional harm’.

In Just A Girl, Amy says: ‘When I was born, Mum said Dad was so pleased that he had a boy to take to the football. But Mum knew I was different. She realised early on that I was born in the wrong body.’

She adds: ‘My Mum supported me when I did a PowerPoint presentati­on to my class about transition­ing and that I wasn’t going to come to school in boys’ clothes any more, but girls’ clothes. I wasn’t Ben, I was Amy.’

Later Amy is shown telling a friend, Josh – a boy who wants to be recognised as a girl – that she is on hormone blockers, saying it took ‘ages’ to get them after ‘loads of tests and talks at the clinic’. ‘Once they realised I was trans for real, [I] got them,’ she says. In another entry, Amy tells viewers she has developed a crush on a boy called Liam, but confides: ‘Liam thinks I’m just a girl, but I’m not. I’m trans. And what’s he going to say if he finds out? Stop being my friend? Why? I’m still me, aren’t I?’

Child psychother­apist Dr Dilys Daws said the programme could confuse children. She said that, while it was natural for youngsters to wonder what it would be like to be the opposite sex, the BBC was irresponsi­ble to feature the ‘extreme’ step of gender change for six-yearolds because they were too young to grapple with such issues.

The programme generated hundreds of comments on Mumsnet.

One mother, who said her sevenyear-old had watched the show, asked: ‘Am I being unreasonab­le to think this is an inappropri­ate topic for a young age group?’

Another replied: ‘Don’t think this is remotely suitable for a sevenyear-old. To start suggesting that children can be transgende­r when they’re far too young to actually have a gender is reckless and damaging. A small boy who is told that he can become a girl may take this as meaning that sex changes are possible, that sometime in the future he’ll wake up with a girl’s body.’

Another user added: ‘I don’t think hormone therapy should be normalised any more than 12-year-olds drinking or doing recreation­al drugs should be normalised.’

Other critics slammed the BBC. Mr Wells, director of the Family Education Trust, said: ‘The more we promote the idea that a boy can be born into a girl’s body and a girl can be born into a boy’s body, and that drugs and surgery can put things right, the more children will become utterly confused. Respecting and preserving a child’s birth sex should be seen as a child protection issue.’

But some parents on Mumsnet were more positive. One wrote: ‘I don’t believe there is “too young” for stuff like this. The earlier you teach your children that everyone is different and that nobody is “normal” the better.’

Dr Polly Carmichael, a clinical psychologi­st specialisi­ng in transgende­r children, said: ‘Raising awareness of these issues is the best way to challenge stigma and discrimina­tion associated with identity issues. Programmes like Just A Girl can contribute to a healthy and informed public discussion.’

The BBC said: ‘Just A Girl is about a fictional transgende­r character trying to make sense of the world, deal with bullying and work out how to keep her friends, which are universal themes that many children relate to, and which has had a positive response from our audience.

‘CBBC aims to reflect true life, providing content that mirrors the lives of as many UK children as possible.’

IT HAS never been more difficult to shield our children from the rattle and din of modern life.

Tablets, smartphone­s and interneten­abled television­s expose them to worlds which can overwhelm their young minds. Few of these issues are more complex and sensitive than that of transgende­rism.

Many adults find it difficult to grasp the psychologi­cal implicatio­ns of changing sex – the strain of dealing with shifting perception­s of gender, and the pain caused by the callous attitudes of others.

But imagine being a six- year-old encounteri­ng the BBC children’s programme called Just A Girl, about a primary school boy who becomes ‘Amy’ after a course of puberty-halting drugs. To add to their bewilderme­nt, ‘Amy’ becomes attracted to a boy and worries what the boy will think if he finds out about her past.

Girls who would previously be described as ‘tomboys’, because they enjoy climbing trees or kicking a football, have instead started questionin­g their gender.

Parents fear the programme could stimulate demand for medical interventi­on which, as this paper has previously revealed, is already available for children as young as nine.

As the nation’s broadcaste­r, the BBC is right to broach difficult subjects – that is not in question.

The issue is about age-appropriat­eness: six year-olds should not have to wrestle with such adult matters.

 ??  ?? CONCERNS: An actress in a scene from the controvers­ial CBBC show
CONCERNS: An actress in a scene from the controvers­ial CBBC show
 ??  ?? Early in the programme, Amy reveals her secret... that she was born a boy Amy tells how she switched from being Ben at primary school UNSURE COMING OUT
Early in the programme, Amy reveals her secret... that she was born a boy Amy tells how she switched from being Ben at primary school UNSURE COMING OUT
 ??  ?? Amy gets a message from her friend Josh asking about the process WORRIES In her new school, Amy fears what pupils will think when they find she’s trans DRUG TALK
Amy gets a message from her friend Josh asking about the process WORRIES In her new school, Amy fears what pupils will think when they find she’s trans DRUG TALK
 ??  ?? FURORE: Our exclusive from 2014
FURORE: Our exclusive from 2014

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