Trans Rights Campaigners Are Marching To The Indian High Commission In London – Here's Why

'They have written a bill without any understanding of what it means to be trans.'
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A small group of protestors are gathering outside the Indian High Commission in London on Monday afternoon, with a goal far larger than their numbers suggest: to hold the Indian government to account over a controversial transgender rights bill.

“They have written a bill without any understanding of what it means to be trans,” Jo Krishnakumar, a 24-year-old from Mumbai currently studying in London, told HuffPost UK.

“We want more people to know about the trans bill and hopefully try to put enough pressure on the government of India and let them know people are watching.”

Supporters of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community hold placards during a protest against passing of Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Bill, 2019, in Bangalore, India last week.
Supporters of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community hold placards during a protest against passing of Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Bill, 2019, in Bangalore, India last week.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

The object of Krishnakumar’s ire is the Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Bill, which critics say fails drastically to live up to its name and actually discriminates against and endangers those it claims to protect.

The bill has been passed in both houses of the Indian government and is currently awaiting the signature of president Ram Nath Kovind, which will make it the law of a land that is home to 1.4bn people – nearly a fifth of the world’s population.

The regressive and oppressive Trans Bill 2019 has passed in both houses. It remains to be signed by the President before it becomes an act.#StopTransBill2019

— Meowpriya (@TheMeowLover) November 26, 2019

India’s transgender community

According to the country’s 2011 census, there are about half a million transgender people in India, though campaigners reckon the true number could be four times that.

Despite a Supreme Court ruling in 2014 that transgender people have equal rights under the law, they are often shunned and many survive through begging or sex work, Reuters reports.

The supreme court ruling

In 2014 the supreme court of India gave a landmark ruling which declared transgender people as a “third gender” and affirmed their equal rights under the country’s constitution.

It also gave them the right to identify as male, female or third-gender without the need to undergo gender reassignment surgery.

Krishnakumar described the supreme court ruling as “a really good judgment” on “how trans people should be treated even in public policy”.

“But this bill goes against all of that so it’s technically illegal,” they added.

Adrija, an ally to the transgender community, speaks about why she is opposing the #TransBill2019. #StopTransBill2019 @rashtrapatibhvn pic.twitter.com/r16JG05aj5

— #MeTooIndia (@IndiaMeToo) December 2, 2019

The Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Bill

The bill’s stated objective is to protect the rights of trans people, but a number of provisions within it actually create a legal system in which they are effectively second-class citizens.

“If you were to sexually assault a trans woman you’d get six months to two years but if you were to sexually assault a cis woman, you would get seven years to life, which is utterly fucked up,” Krishnakumar said.

“There’s a very clear dehumanisation happening in just that one clause.”

In July of last year, Human Rights Watch asked that the government ensure the bill follows the 2014 Supreme Court ruling, saying “its language could be interpreted to mean transgender people are required to have certain surgeries before legally changing their gender”.

The identity certificates

India is also home to the world’s largest biometric identity system called Aadhaar – but the new bill states transgender people must apply using the sex they were assigned at birth unless they have undergone sex reassignment surgery, and can provide proof. It is a drastic procedure that not all wish to go through.

A person who identifies as a trans man, for example, but does not wish to undergo surgery is not able to apply for an identity card as a male, even though Aadhaar is “de facto mandatory for bank accounts, SIM cards, and school enrolment”, according to a study by consulting firm Dalberg.

Meera Sanghamitra, a transgender woman and activist, told Reuters last December the current bill would make life more difficult for the community, especially by refusing the right to self-determine gender.

“What is between my two legs does not determine my gender. My gender is my experience, my gender is my identity, my gender is my decision and my exclusive decision – and this is not being recognised by this country’s parliament,” she said.

The national campaign to #StopTransBill2019 is one of ensuring basic civil, citizenship and constitutional rights and freedoms. All democratic forces across India must join the struggle and demand @rashtrapatibhvn
to refrain from signing the Bill and refer it back to Parliament.

— Meera Sanghamitra (@meeracomposes) December 2, 2019

The protest

At midday on Monday, Krishnakumar joined a protest outside the Indian High Commission in Aldwych, London.

“What we are trying to do is amplify the voices of the Indian diaspora and trans people outside of India,” they said.

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