Connect with us

Привет, что-то ищете?

The Times On Ru
  1. The Times On RU
  2. /
  3. Общество
  4. /
  5. Panama’s trans community failed by gendered lockdown measures – report

Общество

Panama’s trans community failed by gendered lockdown measures – report

Each day when Pau González wakes and looks at his phone, he feels as if he is running a call centre. As the founder of the activist group Hombres Trans Panama, he has been inundated by members of the transgender community seeking advice on how to navigate Panama’s sex-segregated social distancing laws. Some callers have been cautioned or abused by police. Others report feeling suicidal and scared to go out.

In April, Panama announced one of the most aggressive Covid-19 policies in Latin America – dictated which days its citizens could go out according to their sex as stated on their national identification cards.

The gendered lockdown rules – finally lifted this month — meant women could leave their homes on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays and men on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.

A London School of Economics study has found the response “failed to recognise diverse gender identities and may reproduce inequalities and injustice for non-binary individuals with unknown long-term effects”.

The controversial measures were meant to halve the numbers of people on the streets at any one time but the rules left trans people vulnerable to victimisation.

González said he was devastated at the announcement. “These measures meant I could only go out according to my sex assigned at birth as shown on my ID card. I was afraid to be the only man going out on women’s days.”

In the first week of lockdown, González was called by more than 86 people requesting help with buying essential items, too scared to leave their homes.

Two incidents on the first day of lockdown highlighted the impossible contradictions . A trans man who went out in accordance to the sex on his identity card was turned away from a supermarket because, he was told, he would stand out among the women. Meanwhile, a trans woman was arrested because she went out on a day for women, but that did not match the sex on her card. “The police humiliated her and said she was not a real woman,” said González.

Between 1 April and 14 September, Hombres Trans Panama recorded 50 incidents of discrimination. “It was as if we were forced to be in jail in our own homes, relying on others to bring us food and medication,” he said.

González was among dozens of people interviewed as part of the LSE study, due to be published next month. It collected GPS data to track the mobility of men and women between 15 February and 29 May, and used the findings to interpret how the policy compounded existing inequalities.

“The policy failed transgender, non-gender or sex-binary Panamanians from its inception,” said Clare Wenham, assistant professor in global health policy.

“Further investigation is required to ensure future policies to do not use gender in ways that erases individual identities or compounds existing inequalities, particularly those borne out through law enforcement.”

As one interviewee told researchers: “Transgender people in Panama are being humiliated and accused of breaking the law under the quarantine policy simply for being themselves.”

Cristian González Cabrera, a Human Rights Watch researcher, which documented the violence and discrimination against trans people during lockdown, said: “Trans people are used to violence and discrimination but the gendered quarantine singled them out for abuse by giving police and businesses the discretion to decide who is a man and who is a woman.”

He warned the stigmatisation will not end simply because the lockdown has been lifted and that Panama must introduce gender recognition laws so people can easily change their documents to reflect their identity.

“The second major thing is for the government to use this moment to educate the population about sexual orientation and gender identity more generally – it needs to teach Panamanians that trans people are part of our society and should be respected.”

On 16 July the government made a statement acknowledging transphobia and affirming that Panama respects “the diversity of identity and expression”. It also announced sanctions for those found guilty of discrimination.

‘Separation by sex’: gendered lockdown fuelling hate crime on streets of Bogotá

Read more

For González, whose organisation has supported 173 trans people across six regions of Panama, the policy should be a catalyst for change.

“We need legislation to protect the LGBT community including gender recognition laws and marriage equality. The pandemic has brought out the best and worst in people but it gave us the chance to highlight the rights of trans people and I hope Panama will choose to be on the right side of history.”

Оставить комментарий

Leave a Reply

Ваш адрес email не будет опубликован. Обязательные поля помечены *

Стоит Посмотреть

Новости По Дате

Сентябрь 2020
Пн Вт Ср Чт Пт Сб Вс
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
282930  

Вам может быть интересно:

Спорт

Zen Чемпионка Европы по фигурному катанию Алена Косторная заявила изданию Sport, что пропустит сразу два соревновательных сезона «для решения личных проблем». Что скрывается за...

Общество

ZenДОНЕЦК, 3 ноября. Число раненых в результате атаки украинского беспилотника на станцию ​​Никитовка в Горловке в ДНР возросло до двух человек, сообщил мэр города...

Бизнес

В третьем квартале 2024 года более 70% особо критических киберинцидентов были связаны с компрометацией учетных записей сотрудников. По данным центра противодействия кибератакам Solar JSOC...

Спорт

Дзен Ровно 95 лет назад родился советский вратарь Лев Яшин. В 1963 году он стал обладателем главной индивидуальной награды в мировом футболе — «Золотого...