Eastern Eye (UK)

Presenter hopes to ring in good news for trans people

TV ANCHOR DREAMS OF ACCEPTANCE FOR HER COMMUNITY IN BANGLADESH

- Reuters Foundation) (Thomson

BANGLADESH’S first transgende­r news anchor hopes that her regular appearance­s on national television will help other trans people gain greater acceptance in a country where they often face discrimina­tion and live in poverty.

Tashnuva Anan, a rights activist who previously worked with NGOs supporting transgende­r people and migrants, read her first daily news bulletin for a private television channel on Internatio­nal Women’s Day (8).

“This could be revolution­ary and create a new dimension in people’s thinking,” said Anan, 29, who received weeks of training at Boishakhi TV after being selected for the job in auditions.

“The biggest problem is that people are not sensitised ... I hope this can do that, and urge them to look after the many ‘Tashnuvas’ around them,” she said.

Boishakhi TV’s chief editor, Tipu Alam, said that Anan was the country’s first transgende­r television newsreader.

“I hope that this will bring greater acceptance and change the way people view the transgende­r community,” he said.

The government estimates that there are about 11,500 transgende­r people in Bangladesh, but LGBT+ rights campaigner­s say the true figure is likely to be at least 100,000 in a country with a population of about 160 million.

Transgende­r people in the country are often kicked out by their families at a young age and – with no proper education – many struggle to get jobs and end up living in poverty, rights activists say.

Anan, who said she had been “sexually abused, bullied and tortured” when growing up, left home aged 16, but was able to continue her studies and recently received a scholarshi­p to pursue a master’s in public health at a top local university.

While Anan said it was rare for transgende­r people to study and get jobs, there are some signs of greater awareness about the plight of the trans community in the country.

In November, a religious charity opened Bangladesh’s first school for transgende­r people.

Tanvir Islam, who works for the Bandhu Social Welfare Society, a charity that supports transgende­r people, said that putting Anan on air would inspire other members of the community and have a “positive impact”.

“We’ve heard of transgende­r news presenters and lawyers in other countries, but we could rarely give such examples from Bangladesh ... But now, times are changing. These achievemen­ts are the result of a lot of hard work,” Islam said.

Despite the commitment­s of her new job and studies, Anan said that she would continue fighting to improve the lives of trans people. “I’ll always try to work for the transgende­r community ... so they don’t drop out (of school) and don’t leave their families,” she said.

 ??  ?? REVOLUTION­ARY: Tashnuva Anan Shishir presents the news at a studio in Dhaka on
Monday (8)
REVOLUTION­ARY: Tashnuva Anan Shishir presents the news at a studio in Dhaka on Monday (8)

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