Zürcher Nachrichten - Hong Kong transgender men lose court case on ID cards

EUR -
AED 4.306648
AFN 74.461506
ALL 95.497331
AMD 434.727564
ANG 2.098581
AOA 1076.325242
ARS 1633.705651
AUD 1.629932
AWG 2.110441
AZN 1.990101
BAM 1.957665
BBD 2.361982
BDT 143.891226
BGN 1.955795
BHD 0.442753
BIF 3488.090018
BMD 1.172467
BND 1.495947
BOB 8.103309
BRL 5.811567
BSD 1.172733
BTN 111.245814
BWP 15.937342
BYN 3.309322
BYR 22980.357766
BZD 2.358569
CAD 1.592545
CDF 2720.123559
CHF 0.917415
CLF 0.02684
CLP 1056.358057
CNY 8.005782
CNH 8.013679
COP 4287.278858
CRC 533.162614
CUC 1.172467
CUP 31.070382
CVE 110.789427
CZK 24.393209
DJF 208.370507
DKK 7.473365
DOP 69.643298
DZD 155.256906
EGP 62.917406
ERN 17.587008
ETB 184.077179
FJD 2.570166
FKP 0.869145
GBP 0.862578
GEL 3.148075
GGP 0.869145
GHS 13.12576
GIP 0.869145
GMD 86.187315
GNF 10291.333984
GTQ 8.959416
GYD 245.34157
HKD 9.184821
HNL 31.211402
HRK 7.535213
HTG 153.622108
HUF 364.437404
IDR 20329.409352
ILS 3.461651
IMP 0.869145
INR 111.20172
IQD 1535.932075
IRR 1541794.411352
ISK 143.814764
JEP 0.869145
JMD 183.755098
JOD 0.831328
JPY 184.403258
KES 151.459625
KGS 102.497669
KHR 4704.52686
KMF 492.436504
KPW 1055.045445
KRW 1730.93099
KWD 0.360288
KYD 0.977302
KZT 543.190145
LAK 25767.909322
LBP 104994.441056
LKR 374.803909
LRD 215.558395
LSL 19.533573
LTL 3.461991
LVL 0.709214
LYD 7.451067
MAD 10.826546
MDL 20.205719
MGA 4871.6014
MKD 61.59416
MMK 2461.808933
MNT 4195.204721
MOP 9.462803
MRU 46.886726
MUR 55.153169
MVR 18.120435
MWK 2041.877336
MXN 20.490034
MYR 4.655275
MZN 74.92656
NAD 19.533194
NGN 1612.447343
NIO 43.052703
NOK 10.877037
NPR 177.984744
NZD 1.989308
OMR 0.450813
PAB 1.172702
PEN 4.112661
PGK 5.089029
PHP 72.001174
PKR 326.825224
PLN 4.256425
PYG 7212.580237
QAR 4.272177
RON 5.200595
RSD 117.336986
RUB 87.940393
RWF 1714.147095
SAR 4.397022
SBD 9.4367
SCR 17.147353
SDG 704.074903
SEK 10.841042
SGD 1.493483
SHP 0.875365
SLE 28.87203
SLL 24586.047146
SOS 670.069188
SRD 43.918305
STD 24267.70452
STN 24.856305
SVC 10.261785
SYP 129.726557
SZL 19.533492
THB 38.16148
TJS 10.999879
TMT 4.109498
TND 3.379065
TOP 2.82302
TRY 52.971245
TTD 7.960332
TWD 37.040569
TZS 3054.277308
UAH 51.529156
UGX 4409.634413
USD 1.172467
UYU 46.769153
UZS 13996.395816
VES 572.885541
VND 30901.546392
VUV 138.944777
WST 3.179952
XAF 656.6303
XAG 0.01589
XAU 0.000255
XCD 3.168652
XCG 2.113548
XDR 0.818052
XOF 657.166456
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.809895
ZAR 19.580438
ZMK 10553.630303
ZMW 21.900456
ZWL 377.533971
  • RBGPF

    -1.1500

    62.6

    -1.84%

  • CMSD

    0.0700

    23.13

    +0.3%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    22.82

    0%

  • NGG

    3.5600

    89.54

    +3.98%

  • BCC

    0.2700

    79.27

    +0.34%

  • RIO

    3.9900

    100.48

    +3.97%

  • JRI

    0.2500

    12.99

    +1.92%

  • BCE

    0.5200

    23.78

    +2.19%

  • GSK

    0.9100

    52.31

    +1.74%

  • RELX

    0.7900

    36.59

    +2.16%

  • RYCEF

    0.9000

    15.8

    +5.7%

  • AZN

    2.1700

    187.37

    +1.16%

  • VOD

    0.4600

    15.8

    +2.91%

  • BP

    0.5800

    47.38

    +1.22%

  • BTI

    1.3500

    58.8

    +2.3%

Hong Kong transgender men lose court case on ID cards
Hong Kong transgender men lose court case on ID cards

Hong Kong transgender men lose court case on ID cards

Trans people in Hong Kong will not be allowed to have their gender officially recognised on their identity documents unless they undergo sex reassignment surgery, a court ruled on Wednesday.

Text size:

Residents are currently assigned as male or female on their ID cards -- and what goes on the so-called "sex entry" depends on the sex assigned to each person at birth.

Compared to many Western cities, campaigners have criticised Hong Kong as lagging behind on issues of equality, including LGBTQ rights.

The latest ruling comes after two transgender men challenged Hong Kong's policy of only allowing people to officially change their gender on their ID cards after surgery.

No non-binary option is available, nor is the possibility of altering the marker without undergoing surgery.

The two men -- named "Q" and Henry Tse -- last year mounted an appeal to denounce the policy as a human rights violation.

But the Court of Appeal on Wednesday said authorities must have a "clear, definite, consistent and objective yardstick" to determine a person's gender.

Surgery would give a trans person "clear and irreversible resemblance closest to the preferred sex" and anything short of that would lead to ambiguity, judges added.

The judges also added they were "profoundly conscious of the hardship" the applicants had to endure, but that their ID cards would only be checked occasionally.

Tse -- who on Wednesday was photographed leaving the court wearing a face mask that reads "Trans rights are human rights" -- had first brought his case against the government in 2017.

He alleged that the ID card policy had the effect of coercing trans people to undergo sex reassignment surgery despite health risks.

Advocates for transgender rights globally have long waged a cultural battle to educate people that gender identity is not defined by biological traits from birth and that not all trans people choose to undergo surgery.

Joanne Leung, chairperson of Hong Kong's Transgender Resource Centre, expressed disappointment at the lack of knowledge shown by the judges.

"The court has a very limited understanding of what sex and gender are, and still upholds a binary separation of biological sex," Leung told AFP.

Last May, more than half of 234 transgender people surveyed by the Chinese University of Hong Kong said they faced discrimination, with many reporting symptoms of depression.

The self-dubbed "Asia's World City" still has a long way to go, according to activists, with discrimination towards sexual minorities remaining baked into the law.

Hong Kong was originally expected to host the 2022 Gay Games but organisers pushed it back for a year, citing pandemic travel curbs.

The city's pro-Beijing politicians tend to skew socially conservative and there is little political appetite from Hong Kong's unelected leaders to embrace LGBTQ rights.

E.Schneyder--NZN