The Independent on Saturday

ICC introduces city’s first gender-neutral toilets

- WENDY JASSON DA COSTA wendy.jdc@inl.co.za

DURBAN’S ICC has become the only building in the eThekwini Municipali­ty to provide gender-neutral toilets.

The ICC is named the Inkosi Albert Luthuli Internatio­nal Convention Centre after South Africa’s first Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, and was opened by Nelson Mandela in 1997.

Those who identify as non-binary (neither male nor female) now have access to gender-neutral toilets in the building.

Municipal spokespers­on Msawakhe Mayisela said: “The decision to have the gender-neutral toilets at the ICC was because these toilets cater for people who for many reasons feel uncomforta­ble using a toilet that is designated for either males or females.”

He said it was such people’s right to have access to a separate facility, because Section 10 of the Constituti­on notes that “everyone has inherent dignity and the right to have that dignity respected and protected”.

Mayisela said the city did not have gender-neutral toilets anywhere else, but once a decision was made to roll them out elsewhere, it would be communicat­ed.

Childline, a non-profit organisati­on that works to protect children against all forms of violence and abuse, this week raised safety concerns about the gender-neutral toilets.

“While we acknowledg­e gender diversity, we believe gender-neutral toilets will increase instances of violence. South Africa has one of the highest rates of gender-based violence in the world and gender-neutral toilets may make a child more susceptibl­e to attacks,” Childline’s acting director Adeshini Naicker said.

Aluta Humbana, who is in charge of advocacy at the Durban Lesbian & Gay Community & Health Centre, said the fear was unwarrante­d because people had gender-neutral toilets in their homes.

“We don’t have male or female toilets in our homes, everyone uses the same toilet,” said Humbana. “So, deep in our psyche we are used to non-binary spaces.”

Humbana said in the 1990s South Africa was not ready to abolish apartheid and yet it had to be done because it marginalis­ed certain sectors of the community. “Similarly with this concept of non-binary or gender-neutral spaces, it’s imperative that we also consider aligning what we are doing with our Constituti­on.”

She said it meant the LGBTQI community had to be accommodat­ed irrespecti­ve of challenges that existed, as there would always be challenges.

Humbana said the ICC had consulted on the issue last year and had sought the input of their organisati­on, especially about the flow of the facility.

Safety was an important aspect of the toilets, which had separate cubicles and cameras on the outside.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa