The Sunday Guardian

The ordeal of being a transgende­r in India begins from birth

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From her troubled teenage years to being a social activist working for the rights of the transgende­r community, Sharmila (name changed to protect identity), 44, has come a long way.

But the journey has not been easy. Originally from Sri Lanka, Sharmila came to Tamil Nadu in 1977 when she was seven. She began to realise her preference to express herself as a girl when she was a kid.

As she grew out of her pre-teen years, Sharmila’s desire to emulate her sister and mother, trying on their sarees and make-up, was frowned on by her family. She was even taken to a psychiatri­c facility in Tiruchirap­alli, a city in central Tamil Nadu, to be “treated”.

As a child who did not conform to traditiona­l gender norms, Sharmila faced physical and emotional abuse at home and sexual abuse at school. At that age, few have the courage to speak up, said Sharmila.

Four of 10 transgende­r people face sexual abuse before completing 18 years, according to a survey by Swasti Health Resource Centre — a Bengaluru-based non-profit organisati­on — among 2,169 respondent­s across three states: Maharashtr­a, Tamil Nadu and Karnataka.

The abuse begins as early as age five, but most vulnerable are those aged 11 to 15, the data show.

Violence (physical, emotional and sexual) continues beyond childhood: 971 (44.7% respondent­s reported facing 2,811 incidents of violence — an average of three incidents per person — between April and October 2015.

Emotional violence topped the list (1,228), followed by physical violence (802) and sexual violence (781).

Many gender non-conforming children drop out of school due to harassment and discrimina­tion.

As many as 616 respondent­s (28.4%) without education were more vulnerable to violence than those with education, the data reveal.

Without education, life skills and jobs, many trans-women (men who express themselves as women) take to sex work. In most cases, clients are the top perpetrato­rs of physical violence and second in sexual and emotional violence.

That is why activists like Sharmila stress the importance of education and jobs for transgende­r people to integrate them into society and make them less vulnerable to violence and discrimina­tion.

Trans-women are often used by men for sex, only to be abandoned later, Sharmila said. Marriages with men tend to end in separation because of familial and societal pressures.

As many as 751 respondent­s (34.6%) were separated. While 719 respondent­s (33.2%) reported being married, no more than 5.1%, or 110, were living with husbands.

As many as 30 per cent transgende­r people live alone, the survey found. No more than seven per cent lived with families, largely because they were not accepted or lacked support.

The jamaat (community or a cohabitati­ng system for transgende­r people) formed an important support system for many. About 35% or 751 respondent­s live with gurus (mentor) or jamaats.

Besides the jamaat, community organisati­ons were sources of support for transgende­r people: 1,923, or 88.7%, respondent­s were registered members of community organisati­ons. These organisati­ons help them with prevention of HIV AIDS (Human Immunodefi­ciency Virus/Acquired Immuno-Deficiency Syndrome), sexual health and with individual rights.

Concerns of sexual health and individual rights are not always mutually exclusive. Sexual reassignme­nt surgery (SRS), a surgical procedure to change genital organs from one gender to other, as an important measure for self-realisatio­n, is one such scenario. As many as 1,564 respondent­s (72.1%) have undergone SRS. SRS is performed in select government facilities, free of cost, in Tamil Nadu, according to a 2010 report, Hijras/Transgende­r Women in India, released by United Nations Developmen­t Programme (UNDP)-India.

Since private facilities are unaffordab­le, the absence of affordable public-funded facilities forces many individual­s to go to unqualifie­d doctors, resulting, often, in post-operative complicati­ons, particular­ly urological.

Tamil Nadu has proven itself as the most transgende­rfriendly state in India. Besides providing free SRS, it also has a Tamil Nadu Aravanigal (Transgende­r) Welfare Board (TGWB), formed in April 2008, as the nodal body to address the social-protection needs of transgende­r people.

Within a year of TGWB’s existence, 3,887 transgende­r people were enumerated and 2,411 aravani (transgende­r) identity cards were distribute­d, according to this 2012 policy brief for the UNDP by Venkatesan Chakrapani, associated with the Centre for Sexuality and Health Research and Policy, an advocacy.

Until 2010, 335 free land pattas (title deeds), 1,211 ration/food cards and 320 self-employment grants of Rs 20,000 each were distribute­d.

A path-breaking achievemen­t in the struggle for transgende­r rights was a 2014 Supreme Court judgment that recognised them as the third gender. The judgment also attributed to them socially and economical­ly backward status, thus entitling them to reservatio­ns under the other backward classes (OBC) quota.

However, in July 2016, the court reprimande­d the Centre for failing to implement its order two years after it was passed, especially with reference to reservatio­ns in jobs and education. Activists fighting for transgende­r rights have criticised the 2016 draft bill for Transgende­r Persons (Protection of Rights) as underminin­g the court’s 2014 judgment. IANS

 ??  ?? Incidents of violence against transgende­rs are on the rise.
Incidents of violence against transgende­rs are on the rise.

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