Sturgeon urged to pause gender bill after UN advisor’s safety fears
Controversial gender reform plans should be paused while concerns raised by a UN official on the risk to women are explored, the Scottish Conservatives have said.
A nine-page letter from Reem Alaslem, the UN special rapporteur on violence against women and girls, expressed fears the proposals could be abused by predatory men.
Nicola Sturgeon has been accused of “cherry-picking” expert views after she appeared to dismiss Ms Alsalem’s concerns at First Minister’s Questions on Thursday by saying “many of these issues have been discussed and addressed already” by Parliament.
The Gender Recognition Reform (Scotland) Bill aims to make it easier for transgender people to obtain a gender recognition certificate (GRC) by lowering the age limit to 16, decreasing the time an applicant must live in their acquired gender and removing the gender dysphoria diagnosis requirement.
Scottish Tory MSP Rachael Hamilton has now written to Ms Sturgeon to urge her to temporarily pause the Bill until evidence can be taken from Ms Alsalem.
The Bill passed stage two last week with amendments including an increase to the length of waiting time for applicants aged 16 and 17 and a change outlining the legislation would not have an impact on the 2010 Equality Act.
In her letter, Ms Alsalem said the proposals could “potentially open the door for violent males who identify as men to abuse the process”. She said: “This presents potential risks to the safety of women in all their diversity (including women born female, transwomen, and gender non-conforming women).”
The rapporteur praised efforts to reform the gender recognition process and welcomed efforts to bring legislation in “line with international standards”. However, she went on to “strongly” appeal to the Scottish Government to consider the consequences of the plans and said the Bill did not provide any “safeguarding measures to ensure that the procedure is not, as far as can be reasonably assured, abused by sexual predators and other predators of violence”.
“These include access to both single-sex spaces and genderbased spaces,” she said.
And she went on to tell The Times that the legislation had implications for women’s safety across the world.
Calling for the Scottish Parliament to hear evidence from the special rapporteur, Ms Hamilton, gender spokeswoman for the Scottish Tories, said: “As it stands, the Scottish
Parliament, including the committee in charge of scrutinising this Bill, has not had a chance to examine this new piece of evidence from perhaps the world’s leading authority on the subject of women’s safety.”
A Scottish Government spokesperson said: “We have always been clear that the Gender Recognition Reform Bill does not conflict with our continued strong commitment to uphold the rights and protections that women and girls have under the 2010 Equality Act, and we have accepted an amendment to put that position beyond doubt.”