The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Trans activists send out free breast binders to 13-year-olds in unmarked packages... so their parents don’t find out

- By SANCHEZ MANNING

A TRANSGENDE­R charity is giving girls as young as 13 potentiall­y dangerous breast-flattening devices without telling their parents.

The ultra–tight garments can cause ‘horrendous’ health problems including breathing and breastfeed­ing difficulti­es, chronic back pain and broken ribs, increasing the chance of a punctured lung.

They are used by a growing number of girls who believe they are the wrong sex in order to disguise their breasts and make them look like boys.

Now a Mail on Sunday investigat­ion has exposed how a publicly funded organisati­on is secretly sending the controvers­ial chest binders to schoolgirl­s in unmarked packages so that parents are kept in the dark.

An undercover reporter posing as a 13-year-old schoolgirl contacted Manchester-based MORF, part of the LGBT Foundation, after an angry mother told us the group sent her 14-year-old daughter a chest binder without consulting her.

After two short phone calls to the helpline number on its website, our investigat­or was told a chest binder would be sent in the post free of charge and with no indication of what the package contained.

Last night, Conservati­ve MP David Davies compared the chari-

‘Cynical exploitati­on of girls’ vulnerabil­ity’

ty’s actions to child abuse, demanded an inquiry and insisted the body’s funding is suspended.

He said: ‘It’s a scandal that we’re allowing a publicly funded organisati­on to send out breast-binding kits without parental consent or knowledge. I’ll be writing to the Women’s Minister, Victoria Atkins, to get this organisati­on investigat­ed immediatel­y.’

MORF’s website describes it as a support group for ‘trans-masculine’ people – those who were born female but believe they are men.

It clearly states that it is a service only for those aged over 18 and advises younger people to contact other groups that deal with children and teenagers.

But when our reporter told a helpline adviser she was just 13 he had no qualms about discussing her chest size and even suggested that while wearing the binder she should avoid too much exertion during PE lessons.

MORF is based at the Manchester headquarte­rs of the LGBT Foundation, which has received close to £1.2 million from the Department of Health and a £500,000 grant from The Big Lottery Fund.

The mother whose 14-year-old daughter received the chest binder from MORF, told The Mail on Sunday: ‘I only found out they had sent her the binder because I opened a package that was addressed to her.

‘I hid it so she wouldn’t find it. But she had previously been sent one without me knowing and had already started wearing it.

‘Then I realised it was because of the binder that she had stopped exercising and was having trouble breathing.’ Campaigner­s concerned about the rise in girls claiming they are transgende­r say an alarming number are wearing binders.

Vulnerable youngsters can get instructio­ns on how to use binders from transgende­r YouTube stars who make demonstrat­ion videos, which are often accompanie­d by adverts for breast-flattening devices costing as little as £4.

The binders, which often look similar to a vest or crop-top, are typically made of nylon and spandex. When worn, the extremely tight-fitting undergarme­nt compresses the breasts to create the illusion of a flat chest.

But medical experts have highlighte­d their dangers. One senior doctor said they can cause fractured ribs and chronic chest and back pain and may even stop girls from breast feeding in later life due to the damage to breast tissue.

Stephanie Davies-Arai, of the campaign group Transgende­r Trend, which is receiving a rising number of calls from parents worried about their children wearing chest binders, said: ‘The health effects of wearing binders are horrendous and well-documented. To promote binders and supply them free to children behind their parents’ backs is a gross derelictio­n of duty towards girls and a cynical exploitati­on of teenage girls’ vulnerabil­ity to latest fads.’

When our reporter posed as a schoolgirl to ask if MORF could send her a chest binder without her mother finding out, she was promised complete confidenti­ality.

The helpline operator, who identified himself as Barry, assured her there would be nothing on the pack- age to let her mother know it contained a binder. He said: ‘It won’t have LGBT Foundation on it and it will be quite a small package.’

Barry also questioned our reporter, believing he was speaking to a 13-year-old, on her bra size.

‘Obviously I’m not massively familiar with bra sizes so you might have to help me out here,’ he said.

‘Have you looked at the sizing around binders on the internet… do you know what size you might be?’

During the reporter’s second call to the helpline, Barry advised her on some of the health risks which chest binders carry, then asked if she was doing PE at school. When she said yes, he advised her to refrain from over-exertion.

Speaking for MORF, the chief executive of the LGBT Foundation, Paul Martin OBE, said: ‘We’re proud of how we responded to your reporter because we provided sensible, compassion­ate advice.’

 ??  ?? WIDELY AVAILABLE: A youngster models one of the chest binders, above, which can be bought online for as little as £4
WIDELY AVAILABLE: A youngster models one of the chest binders, above, which can be bought online for as little as £4
 ??  ?? RESTRAINT: Fastenings on the binders allow them to be kept tight
RESTRAINT: Fastenings on the binders allow them to be kept tight
 ??  ?? START YOUNG: How we reported toddlers being told about trans issues
START YOUNG: How we reported toddlers being told about trans issues

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