The Borneo Post

German law allows third gender in birth certs

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BERLIN: The German parliament yesterday approved a law allowing a third gender option on birth certificat­es for people who are not distinctly male or female.

Chancellor Angela Merkel’s left- right coalition had passed legislatio­n permitting children born intersex to be registered as “miscellane­ous”.

The new measure follows a ruling by Germany’s top court in November 2017 that current regulation­s on civil status are discrimina­tory against intersex people, noting the sexual identity of an individual is protected as a basic right.

Intersex is a broad term encompassi­ng people who have gender traits, such as genitals or chromosome­s, that do not entirely fit with a typical binary notion of male or female.

According to the United Nations, between 0.05 and 1.7 per cent of the global population are intersex -- about the same percentage as people with red hair.

Sometimes this is apparent at birth, at other times it becomes noticeable in puberty.

The new German law also allows changing a person’s gender and name at a later stage, but it drew criticism because this will in most cases require a medical examinatio­n.

The Lesbian and Gay Associatio­n LSVD charged that this signalled that being intersex was seen as an abnormalit­y and demanded that “degrading assessment­s... must be abolished”.

However, conservati­ve Christian Democrats lawmaker Marc Henrichman­n argued that the official civil register must be based on evidence rather than self- assessment­s, reported DPA news agency.

Germany has since 2013 allowed babies born with characteri­stics of both sexes to leave the gender options of male and female blank.

The Federal Constituti­onal Court in its ruling gave parliament until the end of 2018 to amend the current legislatio­n. — AFP

 ??  ?? This file photo shows a gender neutral sign seen outside a bathroom at the Oval Park Grille restaurant in Durham, North Carolina. — AFP photo
This file photo shows a gender neutral sign seen outside a bathroom at the Oval Park Grille restaurant in Durham, North Carolina. — AFP photo

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