The Scotsman

Warning over impact of gender act change

- By GINA DAVIDSON

MSPS have been told proposed changes to the Gender Recognitio­n Act detrimenta­lly affect the rights of both women and transsexua­ls.

A group of 14 transsexua­ls have written to MSPS outlining concerns about a proposed change which would allow people to selfdeclar­e their gender rather than receiving a medical diagnosis of gender dysphoria.

They warned the “naive proposals” will actually “weaken safeguardi­ng protection­s in a misguided attempt to support a simplistic notion of inclusion”, and fear a backlash could threaten access to medical treatment.

A letter from 14 transsexua­ls has been sent to all MSPS outlining their concerns about proposed changes to the Gender Recognitio­n Act, which they claim could detrimenta­lly affect their rights as well as those of women.

The group has written ahead of a “Being Trans in Scotland 2019” event in the Scottish Parliament tomorrow that aims to give MSPS the chance to talk to trans people about their lives and experience­s as well as organisati­ons representi­ng the trans community.

In the letter to all politician­s on proposals which would allow people to self-declare their gender rather than receiving a medical diagnosis of gender dysphoria, they say they are “deeply concerned about naive proposals to weaken safeguardi­ng protection­s in a misguided attempt to support a simplistic notion of inclusion”.

They also state that positions such as “gender identity is more fundamenta­l to human society than biological sex ... can have a devastatin­g impact in wider society and especially on the poorest and most vulnerable women”.

Their letter says: “As transsexua­l people we are horrified by the impact on women: their right to organise as a biological sex and their ability to protect their own boundaries.

“When women do protest theyareacc­usedofbigo­tryand transphobi­a, and dehumanise­d as TERFS (trans exclusiona­ry radical feminists). We therefore understand why many women choose to remain silent despite their discomfort and outrage when biological males claim they are entitled to the rights and protection­s granted to women; take places reserved for women in politics and wider society; compete in female sport despite ongoing physical advantage; and put their needs above the needs of women.”

The letter comes after a week of internal SNP warfare, which has seen private concerns about Nicola Sturgeon’s views on trans people’s rights leaked by SNP staff. A social media row between SNP activists and politician­s also developed, while equalities secretary Shirley-anne Somerville attempted to heal the division by admitting women’s concerns were not “transphobi­c”.

The authors of the letter say they have written to express “solidarity with women who have aired reasonable concerns and then been attacked for doing so”, adding they fear a backlash will threaten their rights such as access to medical treatment to alleviate “the debilitati­ng effects of gender dysphoria”, as well as “the right to express ourselves in ways more typical of the opposite sex or of neither sex and the right to be protected from discrimina­tion, harassment and abuse”.

The interventi­on was welcomed by the SNP’S Joan Mcalpine, who said it was “significan­t”. She said: “It shows not all trans people agree with the vocal and often aggressive extremists who condemn reasonable questions as ‘transphobi­c’.”

And Susan Sinclair, a feminist campaigner behind the Scottish Women blog, said: “I am grateful for their expressed solidarity with the women who have been attacked for voicing concerns over the negative impacts of the policies and practices from both central and local government­s. I agree with their call to engage in meaningful and constructi­ve dialogue in an attempt to move forward from where we find ourselves. A commonsens­e approach that considers the needs of all protected groups, and more importantl­y, works within the parameters of the law is crucial to all future developmen­ts.”

An SNP spokespers­on said: “Nobody raising genuine concerns over women’s rights should face knee-jerk accusation­s of transphobi­a. However, transgende­r people continue to face prejudice in their everyday lives and deserve to know that their government is working to change that.”

A Scottish Government spokespers­on said: “Reforming the 2004 Gender Recognitio­n Act remains one of the Scottish Government’s key equality priorities, to ensure that trans people can enjoy access to an improved gender recognitio­n process that is in line with internatio­nal best practice.

“There were around 15,500 responses to the Scottish Government consultati­on on proposals to reform the Act. Ministers are currently considerin­g the responses to the consultati­on and will make an announceme­nt on the way forward in due course.”

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