Yahoo – AFP,
June 24, 2017
Pakistan
has issued its first third-gender passport to a transgender activist, who
hailed the move as a step forward for the marginalised community in the deeply
conservative South Asian country.
Farzana
Riaz, a transgender in northwestern Peshawar city, said the new passport would
help her campaign globally on behalf of her community, who are also known as
khawajasiras -- an umbrella term in Pakistan denoting a third sex that includes
transsexuals, transvestites and eunuchs.
"I
have received my passport which mentions my gender as X and not as a male or
female," Farzana told AFP on Saturday.
"Earlier
I had a passport which had described my gender as a male. But this time I told
the authorities that I won't accept my passport if it doesn't identify me as a
transgender," the 30-year-old co-founder and president of rights
organisation TransAction said.
"Now
it will be more convenient for me to travel abroad because earlier I faced
problems at international airports because of a contradiction in my appearance
and sex mention on my passport," she added.
Modern-day
Pakistani transgender people claim to be cultural heirs of the eunuchs who
thrived at the courts of the Mughal emperors that ruled the Indian subcontinent
for two centuries until the British arrived in the 19th century and banned
them.
In 2009,
Pakistan became one of the first countries in the world to legally recognise a
third sex, allowing transgenders to obtain identity cards, while several have
also run in elections.
They number
at least half a million people in the country, according to several studies.
Like
Farzana, many earn their living by being called upon for rituals such as
blessing newborns or to bring life to weddings and parties as dancers -- and,
sometimes, in more clandestine ways.
But despite
these signs of integration they live daily as pariahs, often reduced to begging
and prostitution, subjected to extortion and discrimination.
Meanwhile
homosexuality, prohibited by Islam, is punishable by 10 years imprisonment or
even 100 lashes in Pakistan.

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