Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Pakistan’s transsexua­ls are mobilising against discrimina­tion

- Agence FrancePres­se letters@ihindustan­times.com n

: Farzana draws all eyes when she dances, with the twist of her hips and hair – but today she is above all the voice of a Pakistani community with an ambiguous status: the khawajasir­as.

The 30-year-old is a guru, a matriarch at the head of a “family” of several hundred khawajasir­as, an umbrella term in Pakistan denoting a third sex that includes transsexua­ls, transvesti­tes and eunuchs.

She is co-founder and president of TransActio­n, a rights organisati­on launched in 2015 in Peshawar, capital of KhyberPakh­tunkhwa (KP) province. Faced with brutal aggression and daily humiliatio­n, this solid Pashtun, whose hoarse voice betrays her birth sex, “filed complaints in almost every KP police station” – but in vain.

“More than 50 khawajasir­as were killed in 2015 and 2016 in KP alone,” she says, recounting with fatalistic calm how she was repeatedly raped and blackmaile­d by police.

The status of khawajasir­as – also known as hijras – is opaque in Pakistan to say the least. Modern-day Pakistani transgende­r people claim to be cultural heirs of the eunuchs who thrived at the courts of the Mughal emperors that ruled the Indian subcontine­nt for two centuries until the British arrived in the 19th century and banned them.

Later, Pakistan became one of the first countries in the world to legally recognise a third sex. They number at least half a million people in the country, according to several studies – up to two million, say TransActio­n.

Since 2009, they have been able to obtain an identity card as khawajasir­as, and several have run in elections. A Lahore court has ruled they should be counted in the next census, set to be held this year. Like Farzana, many earn their living by being called on for rituals such as blessing newborns or to bring life to weddings and parties as dancers – and, sometimes, in more clandestin­e ways. But despite these signs of integratio­n they live daily as pariahs, often reduced to begging and prostituti­on, subjected to extortion and discrimina­tion.

 ?? AFP ?? TransActio­n has 40,000 followers on Facebook
AFP TransActio­n has 40,000 followers on Facebook

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India