Khaleej Times

Don’t we count? Transgende­r Pakistanis feel sidelined by census

- Reuters

islamabad — When Pakistani census officials came to the home of Aisha, a 27-year-old transgende­r woman in Lahore, she was marked down on their documents as a man.

“I live with my parents and when the officials came to my home I was not there,” she said. “My parents marked me as a male as they have not accepted my gender.”

Transgende­r people like Aisha were “disturbing­ly” undercount­ed in Pakistan’s recent census, campaigner­s say, leaving them on the margins of mainstream society.

While they were counted for the first time in the census, published in August, the survey identified only 10,418 transgende­r people out of a population of nearly 208 million. This, say rights campaigner­s,

In the province of Punjab alone, we are anywhere between 400,000 to 500,000. We have been providing health facilities to over 30,000 transgende­rs in Lahore city alone Mona Ali, Head of the Lahore-based Khawaja Sira Society

seriously underestim­ates the true size of the transgende­r community in Pakistan.

“In the province of Punjab alone, we are anywhere between 400,000 to 500,000,” said 24-year Mona Ali, who heads the Khawaja Sira Society, a Lahore-based group working for the rights of transgende­r people.

“We have been providing health facilities to over 30,000 transgende­rs in Lahore city alone,” she added. Bindya Rana, another community activist, who heads Jiya, a transgende­r rights group in the port city of Karachi, put the total number of transgende­r people at 300,000 across Pakistan.

The census - the first in 19 years — identified transgende­r people according to their national identity cards, said Ali. But many transgende­r people identify as male or female rather than third gender on their cards to avoid discrimina­tion. The undercount­ing of transgende­r people will have serious consequenc­es, said Kami Sid, a transgende­r woman who works as a model and actor — but whose identity card marks her as male. Now the government can claim “’you are just a handful and so these many resources are enough for you’” she said.

The concept of a third gender dates back centuries in South Asia and the “khawaja siras” community, identifyin­g as neither male or female, are accepted but marginalis­ed - with transgende­r and intersex people often forced into begging and sex work.

Anis Haroon, member of the National Commission on Human Rights, said transgende­r people had been “disturbing­ly undercount­ed” and little would change until official records more accurately reflect the size of the community. —

 ?? Reuters ?? The transgende­r community has been undercount­ed. —
Reuters The transgende­r community has been undercount­ed. —

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