The Prague Post - Thai trans people push to be 'truly' accepted

EUR -
AED 4.248263
AFN 75.190407
ALL 96.078998
AMD 435.785094
ANG 2.070729
AOA 1060.765337
ARS 1615.363826
AUD 1.669233
AWG 2.082201
AZN 1.967986
BAM 1.958472
BBD 2.330339
BDT 142.774778
BGN 1.977291
BHD 0.436709
BIF 3438.416485
BMD 1.156778
BND 1.486095
BOB 7.994665
BRL 5.976148
BSD 1.156958
BTN 107.547395
BWP 15.788198
BYN 3.401455
BYR 22672.851011
BZD 2.326924
CAD 1.609506
CDF 2660.589268
CHF 0.92656
CLF 0.026982
CLP 1065.173396
CNY 7.961642
CNH 7.942386
COP 4265.087173
CRC 536.722935
CUC 1.156778
CUP 30.65462
CVE 110.415632
CZK 24.511954
DJF 206.026615
DKK 7.472212
DOP 70.284669
DZD 153.719306
EGP 63.267319
ERN 17.351672
ETB 180.653187
FJD 2.588522
FKP 0.874128
GBP 0.873535
GEL 3.100087
GGP 0.874128
GHS 12.738102
GIP 0.874128
GMD 85.025704
GNF 10149.846738
GTQ 8.850922
GYD 242.065001
HKD 9.065236
HNL 30.722913
HRK 7.529585
HTG 151.687593
HUF 382.502589
IDR 19746.202386
ILS 3.636343
IMP 0.874128
INR 107.513792
IQD 1515.667721
IRR 1522088.641414
ISK 143.798498
JEP 0.874128
JMD 182.128465
JOD 0.820158
JPY 185.091401
KES 150.439674
KGS 101.159954
KHR 4636.224686
KMF 493.943892
KPW 1041.103053
KRW 1740.21048
KWD 0.358324
KYD 0.964195
KZT 537.641848
LAK 25525.270725
LBP 103607.609938
LKR 365.089645
LRD 212.885825
LSL 19.551272
LTL 3.415665
LVL 0.699723
LYD 7.395089
MAD 10.849501
MDL 20.213139
MGA 4832.488193
MKD 61.618
MMK 2429.364244
MNT 4133.528571
MOP 9.337537
MRU 45.979727
MUR 54.392156
MVR 17.871894
MWK 2006.193555
MXN 20.570494
MYR 4.663011
MZN 73.987705
NAD 19.551272
NGN 1600.113823
NIO 42.578086
NOK 11.20785
NPR 172.076033
NZD 2.031013
OMR 0.444777
PAB 1.156943
PEN 3.962806
PGK 5.078929
PHP 69.646113
PKR 325.289446
PLN 4.278205
PYG 7502.234783
QAR 4.229952
RON 5.09492
RSD 117.341242
RUB 90.864588
RWF 1689.968985
SAR 4.343924
SBD 9.306557
SCR 17.443432
SDG 695.223419
SEK 11.0356
SGD 1.486581
SHP 0.867883
SLE 28.457822
SLL 24257.071159
SOS 661.187724
SRD 43.206796
STD 23942.97141
STN 24.533045
SVC 10.123811
SYP 128.060616
SZL 19.546751
THB 37.808117
TJS 11.008781
TMT 4.048723
TND 3.405045
TOP 2.785244
TRY 51.606509
TTD 7.850744
TWD 37.009929
TZS 3007.622894
UAH 50.281295
UGX 4344.927486
USD 1.156778
UYU 46.923203
UZS 14115.256474
VES 547.696494
VND 30462.594823
VUV 137.939944
WST 3.199984
XAF 656.838885
XAG 0.016412
XAU 0.00025
XCD 3.126251
XCG 2.085254
XDR 0.816978
XOF 656.850256
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.006203
ZAR 19.598826
ZMK 10412.393399
ZMW 22.416904
ZWL 372.48208
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • RYCEF

    0.2500

    15.75

    +1.59%

  • CMSC

    -0.1400

    22.04

    -0.64%

  • JRI

    -0.0900

    12.64

    -0.71%

  • BCC

    0.8050

    74.555

    +1.08%

  • NGG

    0.2400

    87.3

    +0.27%

  • BCE

    -0.2750

    23.985

    -1.15%

  • VOD

    0.0850

    15.225

    +0.56%

  • RIO

    0.2600

    94.27

    +0.28%

  • RELX

    -0.1680

    33.442

    -0.5%

  • GSK

    -0.7550

    55.615

    -1.36%

  • AZN

    -3.2350

    199.595

    -1.62%

  • BTI

    0.0400

    58.75

    +0.07%

  • CMSD

    -0.0650

    22.285

    -0.29%

  • BP

    -0.2450

    47.235

    -0.52%

Thai trans people push to be 'truly' accepted
Thai trans people push to be 'truly' accepted / Photo: Lillian SUWANRUMPHA - AFP

Thai trans people push to be 'truly' accepted

Stethoscope over her white coat, Thai doctor Kachisarah Sridakhot walks hospital corridors hoping to beat a path for other trans women to be fully accepted in the kingdom.

Text size:

LGBTQ activists won a major victory last month when Thai lawmakers passed a bill that should see same-sex marriages become legal later this year -- a first in Southeast Asia.

Now campaigners are hoping to push the government to allow trans men and women to have their gender recognised in official paperwork.

Kachisarah knows the problem all too well -- despite identifying as a woman, she is still identified by the government as a man.

"This is discrimination," she told AFP.

The 26-year-old said she has fought for years to be able to express her true gender.

"At medical school, they didn't allow me to dress how I wanted to based on my gender, so I had to wear the male outfit," she said.

"The reason they gave me was that 'patients couldn't accept it', but in fact, (patients) just wanted to get better and they respected us for who we are."

It is not currently possible for a person to change their gender on documents such as ID cards and passports.

This can make even routine tasks like visiting the bank or passing through airport immigration a challenging or humiliating experience for transgender people.

- 'Feel like they really exist' -

Thailand has long enjoyed a reputation for tolerance of the LGBTQ community, hosting yearly pride events attended by locals and visitors from around the world.

But advocates have worked for decades to ensure LGBTQ rights become enshrined in law, struggling against traditional attitudes in a largely conservative Buddhist society.

A 2021 Human Rights Watch report found Thailand provides limited legal protection to trans people, who face harassment, discrimination and stigma.

A growing number of countries around the world allow people to change their legal gender on official documents and Thai activists are keen to enact similar changes in the kingdom.

A first attempt to pass a gender recognition bill, submitted by the progressive Move Forward Party (MFP), was voted down by parliament in February.

Activists say they are eager to push another draft -- this time from scholars and campaigners themselves.

The proposed bill would allow individuals the right to declare their gender, rather than be made to be identified by the gender assigned at birth.

Crucially, such a law would also allow trans people easier and safer access to vital medical care.

"People can say if they are male, female or non-binary," Nachale Boonyapisomparn, a trans activist who worked on the draft bill, told AFP.

More than 10,000 people -- the minimum legal requirement -- have signed a petition in support, and the bill is set to be submitted to parliament later this year for consideration.

MFP lawmaker and LGBTQ activist Tunyawaj Kamolwongwat said it would be a monumental step for Thailand.

"It will make LGBTQ people feel like they really exist in the society," he told AFP.

- 'No Sex Stigma' -

It is an issue that is especially close to Kachisarah's heart.

Hailing from Ubon Ratchathani province, the heartland of Thailand's rural rice-growing northeast, Kachisarah says she was a shy child whose parents were uncomfortable with her self-expression.

She attended medical school -- beginning her transition at 17 -- eventually becoming a doctor specialising in sexual health.

"I tried to prove myself to be accepted by the majority of society," she explained.

Now, she uses her platform –- a TikTok account called "No Sex Stigma" -– to try to counter a dearth of medical knowledge among the LGBTQ community in the kingdom.

Known as "Dr Bruze" to her 6,000 followers, she shares information about safe sex practices, as well as advice on hormone supplements.

"Some people I know had problems with their liver because they didn't take medication correctly," she said.

Ultimately, she hopes improving education about and for the LGBTQ community will change perceptions.

"If Thai society truly accepts us, we wouldn't have to struggle or prove ourselves."

N.Kratochvil--TPP