Transgender life becomes vicious circle in
Vietnam
Without legal protection,
transgender people are unable to find jobs and have to do work that is looked
down on, which make others despise them even more.
Homosexuals,
bi-sexuals and transgenders have remained largely unprotected by laws and
regulations
The Government’s Decree 88,
issued in 2008, bans people with no "gender problems" from changing
gender. If they want to re-define their registered gender, they must have
several documents from hospitals, with the authority of the Ministry of Health.
Then they must seek approval from local authorities to complete the procedure.
But in fact, the Health Ministry has only given the gender
reassignment testing rights to three hospitals in early 2013. “Re-defining”
one's sex legally means officially to correct a mistake in the definition of
one's gender. But “transgender” is understood as transforming from one gender
to another, so the local authorities often refuse to recognise the these
cases. As a result, homosexuals, bi-sexuals and transgenders have remained largely
unprotected by laws and regulations.
According
to an online survey conducted by the International Society for Environmental
Epidemiology (ISEE), which included 223 participants who have changed from
male to female across
Dr.
Pham Quynh Phuong from the ISEE said transgender people are dealing with a
vicious circle. They often give up on education early because they are
despised. This, Phuong said, causes problems for them when they want to find
work but have no university and in some cases even a high school diploma.
These people often must resort to doing the least prestigious jobs such as
funeral singers or prostitutes. Those jobs only lower their positions in
other people's eyes.
"Around
32% don't have sufficient education to find good jobs because they dropped
out early, and 35% were dismissed because they came out." Phuong said.
A transgender doing
circus tricks at a funeral
Even when they are not dismissed,
they still have to endure unequal treatment, such as lower wages. "When
I tried to apply at a convenience store, they outright told me that they
didn't want a fag working there," one transgender person said.
Another transgender in
Currently,
the transgender community remains disadvantaged, in part because the
government does not have clear and adequate policies or regulations for their
status. "We need to add them into our preferential policies rules,"
Phuong said.
By Hoai
|
Thứ Tư, 6 tháng 11, 2013
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