Friday, September 9, 2011

World Health Organization (WHO): ICD Revision Process. Should Transsexuality still be classified as a disorder?

For starters, I would like to inform you that according to the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) by the World Health Organization (WHO), Transsexuality is a mental disorder. Yes, you read it right!!


Facts;
1. Homosexuality was removed from this list of disorders/diseases in 1990.
2. The 11th version of the ICD is scheduled to be presented to the World Health Assembly (WHO'sGoverning Body) in May 2015.
3. We have between now and 2015 to fight for the removal of transsexuality from the ICD.
4. Transsexuality and Transvestism can be removed from this list.


Details of the classification in the current 10th Edition of the ICD;
The big category in which we fall is: Mental and behavioural disorders

Sub category: Disorders of adult personality and behaviour
One of the disorders under this classification is (the Fs are just codes);

Gender Identity Disorders (GID)
Under this category, there is;

F64.0 Transsexualism A desire to live and be accepted as a member of the opposite sex, usually accompanied by a sense of discomfort with, or inappropriateness of, one's anatomic sex, and a wish to have surgery and hormonal treatment to make one's body as congruent as possible with one's preferred sex.

F64.1 Dual-role transvestism The wearing of clothes of the opposite sex for part of the individual's existence in order to enjoy the temporary experience of membership of the opposite sex, but without any desire for a more permanent sex change or associated surgical reassignment, and without sexual excitement accompanying the cross-dressing.

Gender identity disorder of adolescence or adulthood, nontranssexual type

Excludes: fetishistic transvestism ( F65.1 )

F64.2 Gender identity disorder of childhood
A disorder, usually first manifest during early childhood (and always well before puberty), characterized by a persistent and intense distress about assigned sex, together with a desire to be (or insistence that one is) of the other sex. There is a persistent preoccupation with the dress and activities of the opposite sex and repudiation of the individual's own sex. The diagnosis requires a profound disturbance of the normal gender identity; mere tomboyishness in girls or girlish behaviour in boys is not sufficient. Gender identity disorders in individuals who have reached or are entering puberty should not be classified here but in F66.-.

Excludes: egodystonic sexual orientation ( F66.1 )
sexual maturation disorder ( F66.0 )


F64.8 Other gender identity disorders

F64.9 Gender identity disorder, unspecified
Gender-role disorder NOS

In case of questions, please do not hesitate to ask before we move on.


I will be proposing in the next issue on how we could all possibly contribute to the process. You may do the same by sending me your suggestions (julie.mukasa@gmail.com) which I will definitely posted here. You could also post it as a comment.

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

What happened at the opening of Proudly African and Transgender in Berlin?

I just got of the skype call from Berlin where the exhibition is opening.

I was honoured to do an opening speach at this event. Thanks to Gabrielle Le Roux and Amnesty International.

In short, I spoke about the origin of this exhibition right from the time that I first met Gabrielle in 2002. Following this, I shared with those present about the African trans movement. Generally, I focused on where we were before, the various initiatives, processes and events, that let to more organizing on the continent, noting that prior to 2008, there was only one transgender organization on the whole continent, Gender DynamiX.

I spoke about the Nairobi Trans Declaration of 2007 and the Gender Identity Workshop for Eastern and Southern Africa in Cape Town, South Africa in 2008. I shared how these 2 events were very instrumental in the emergency of the movement in the region.

Time was against me but I had prepared to share about the Maputo CAL workshop as well as the role of GDX in the emergency of the movement in Africa. I found time though to name all the organizations and support groups that have emerged since 2008 as follows;

1. Transgender, Intersex and Transesxuals Uganda (TITs-Uganda)
2. Transgender Education and Advocay (TEA) in Kenya
3. Trans Bantu in Zambia
4. TAMON in Namibia
5. Rainbow Identity Association (RIA), Botswana
6. Trangender and Intersex Africa (TIA), South Africa
7. True Identity, Zimbabwe
8. Coalition of African Sisters, Eastern Cape, South Africa

Just after the presentation, checked my mail and learnt that there is also African AgenDER (AA), Soweto, South Africa and Trans Support Uganda (TRASU). Amazing!!

The function is still going on and in case I get any reports from there, I will definitely share them.

I will also share with you, right here on the blog, about the Nairobi Trans Declaration of 2007 as well as the Eastern and Southern Africa Gender Identity Workshop, December 2008.

Watch the space.

Proudly African and Transgender Launching Today in Berlin

Today, September 7, is the day that the exhibition Proudly African and Transgender is launching in Berlin, Germany. This comes after launches in Amsterdam, Stockholm, and other European cities.

The exhibition, for those who do not know, is the hard work of Gabrielle Le Roux, an African artist and human rights activist from Cape Town, South Africa, with the support of different dedicated transgender activists from Africa. The various launches have been graced by, among others, Victor Mukasa, Silva Eisses, Chan Mubanga and Julius Kaggwa. All these had their portraits drawn and are part of this project.

The exhibition is a collection of portraits on African transgender activists and human rights defenders. It has a total of more than 10 portraits so far and is an on-going project. The exhibition moves from city to city creating visibility about the transgender movement in Africa and we are very positive that it will be in Africa where it was born, very soon.

Today, the exhibition launches in Berlin, Germany and Victor Mukasa will be speaking, via skype, at its launch this evening.

I will bring you more after the function.

Keep checking.

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Comment on the blog post about Trans - Jacking

Audrey - Kenya

There is something of interest that you commented on

"Seriously.  There is no subject that trans people are not affected by.
 No posting that doesn’t directly impact trans people’s lives.  And
anything that affects trans people’s lives can be used to describe
issues and concerns of importance to trans people."


The matter at hand is the fact that lesbians gays, bisexuals normally
view our issues from a homosexual lense. Here is an example: There is
this rubbish of gays and lesbians saying LGBT people are criminalized
in Africa. But in the actual sense is being a transgender person
criminalized? Is the act of changing sex; medically, legally and
socially criminalized? The answer is a simple NO.

But what do these people go around telling the public and the police,
transsexuals are criminalized. But, asked about this misinformation
about transgender people, what do gays and lesbian say?

I had the pleasure of asking one of the leaders of a Kenya leading
gay, lesbian, bi, trans and intersex organization that question and I
wasn't shocked at what he said: transgender women who have anal sex
are criminalized.

But why is it that when a transgender person is mentioned they resort
to scrutinizing our sexual practices? Who gave them that right?
Infact, aren't they the same people who go around telling our
governments that their sexual practices are private and should not be
scrutinized by anyone?

And why are they so fast to represent us in meetings and workshops?
Talking of sexual minorities? Have we ever asked ourselves what sexual
minorities are? They are people who are marginalized because of their
sexual practises and sexual orientation. But, being transgender is not
an issue of sexual practices or sexual orientation; so who gave them
the right to do that to us? Shame on them.

Then it never ceases to amaze me the way they twist our issues to be
theirs and against heterosexuals. They will tell people and the media
that the LGBT movement is the gay movement and the heterosexuals are
against us. But, aren't they provoking the society at our own expense?
Who bears the blunt of the whole provocation? Transsexuals. And since
when did we become gays or men who have sex with other men (MSMs)?

I know most trans people will feel helpless at the thought of telling
homosexuals to stop twisting our issues to fit their struggle or to
allow us to represent ourselves or to tell them to f*** off with their
gay labels.

And why do they ignore the oppression of themselves against
transsexuals? The last two days have been hectic. There is this gay
guy which I will call a f***ing faggot and he has been calling me
every now and then telling me he wants to fuck me. Despite my efforts
to explain to him am not one of them and even if I was to date a man I
would not date a fag like him, he keeps sending me some obscene
messages and the stress is killing me. I plan to report the matter to
the police and I hope I will get some help. Its so depressing to read
a message of some fag telling you how he wants to suck your c*** and
f*** you in the ass. So depressing yet the gay activists I have
reported to have not done anything to stop their kind. Its sickening.

Mean what you claim you do or back-off!!!

Just been visting various trans blogs and something really captured my attention; TRANS-JACKING. I am posting a very interesting piece about the topic after what I have to say. I was fired up when I first read about it and in fact it was one of the things that inspired me into blogging on trans issues.
Trans people allover the world are fed up! Fed up of all the hypocrisy, pretense, hate, the accusation of confusing others, TRANSPHOBIA. Transphobia stinks out there but it sucks more when you experience it within the LGBTI movement. Ever been told by a so called LGBTI activist that you are confusing them with your gender identity? Ever been told that “before we deal with your issues as a trans person we need to understand your gender identity”? Now this is a human rights defender to whom you are reporting violations committed against you and they want to first understand your identity! Even when they write proposals for funding, I mean LGBTI activists, they will ask for “funds for outreach to our transgender communities”. When you pay them a visit, they will ask you what transgender means after leading LGBTI organizations for 10 years. I call this exploitation and theft.
Today the trans movement in Africa is awake and up in arms to deal with this nonsense. We are claiming spaces and coming up with our own initiatives. We are fed up of thieves and users. Apologies to the few allies that we have here in Africa. I am speaking to all those who silence transgender people and pretend to work on their issues. Transgender people have brains, fully functioning brains and cannot sit and watch as this keeps happening. Enough of the exploitation and hard work towards the extinction of our kind. We will tell off every transphobe, thief and user and will act on what we say. We will expose them until they either do the right thing or back-off.
Below is a post I found on one of the blogs. It fired me up.

I am rather vocal about how one does not separate the T from the LGBT.  I don’t mince words about it.
However, that argument is a different one from what I’m going to suggest here.  I am upset.  I am angry.  I am also in the middle of a fundraising campaign where I generally have to be nice to people.
Well, fuck that.
Allies are not the people that lead a fight.  THey are the people who follow in a fight.  THis is something that seems to escape people constantly when it comes to dealing with Trans issues.  One does give allies a certain amount of leeway.
However, let’s face a very simple fact: not all cis people are our allies.  This is especially prevalent among cisLGB sites, organizations, and so forth.
Recently, I was reading one of those  fuck-ups that always happen on sites that generally think saying “LGBT” means talking only about cisLGB issues.
And a person who is a frequent commentor and who uses the tone argument as an excuse not to get involved accused someone I like (even though we don’t always agree) of “trans jacking”.
For clarity, Trans-jacking is a tone argument.  It is an attempt to silence someone. It is an act of oppression.
And this little thing, when combined with the recent expereince over at the RENWL blog, tells me something has to happen, so I[‘m going to make a suggestion to all trans people who participate in online blogs.
Let’s trans jack every single thread.
Seriously.  There is no subject that trans people are not affected by.  No posting that doesn’t directly impact trans people’s lives.  And anything that affects trans people’s lives can be used to describe issues and concerns of importance to trans people.
So here’s the thing:   let us make sure that every single posting on any major LGBT issue is specifically and intentionally used to discuss the way that trans voices and experiences are erased, silenced, and ignored.
You don’t have to be nice about it.  But talk about it.  Constantly and everywhere. Until they start to talk about it.
Trans voices are unique in the LGBT universe.  Our comments create more discussion and spark more thoughtful stuff than any other.
It is time that the usual suspects realize that we are fucking sick and tired of people thinking that our needs are secondary, That when they say LGBT that they can mean just the cisLGB.  That when people talk about marriage being more important than ENDA that they are literally enganging in an act of oppression against trans people.
They will deny it.  It doesn’t matter — it is true.  To prioritize marriage over employment discrimination is oppressive.  It is transphobic, it is erasure, it is a statement that promotes the continued suffering and hardship of trans people.
It is a concept that literally says that what I do, every single day, is worthless, and that the money I’m trying to raise to make life better for trans people is wasted.
And I am no longer willing to allow that.  The LGBT community has to start looking towards trans needs, and they have to start doing it now, and the best way to do that is to make them aware that until they start to pay attention to our needs, we will not only not shut up, but we will not let them talk about anything without having to deal with our displeasure at the same time.
The single most important thing that the LGBT orgs and communities can do over the next two years is focus our energies.  On one single and vital concept.  Ending discrimination in employment, housing, education, and opportunity is the most important issue.  It will affect all LGBT folks. It will change the game, make available more money, improve lives, make the movement stronger.
We don’t need a divorce.  We need to tell the dumbasses that they are dumbasses and we need to tell those people who think we are new, we are “just coming into our own” or whatever else, that we are no longer going to just sit back and let them run things.
They thought 2010 was the year of the trans people.
THey ain’t seen nothing yet.
Trans-jack every thread.  Every single one.  Make them aware that we not only have a voice, but that we are going to kick some ass with it.
No more oppression from the LGB.
We’ve got enough of it from the bad guys.

Monday, January 10, 2011

African Trans Organizing

The transgender movement in Africa is relatively young but very vibrant. For many years, African trans people have been silenced within their communities, including in LGBT spaces and organizing.

Until 2008, Africa had only one transgender organization, Gender DynamiX (GDX), which was founded in July 2005 by Liesl Theron (Mama Trans) and Lex (who deserves to be called Papa Trans). Thanks to those 2. The organization, whose vision is to create awareness and visualize transgenderism has done a lot of work within South Africa and has in the past 3 years extended this to the rest of Africa. In fact many trans activists on the continent were inspired by GDX.

In 2008, Africa saw the emergence of a trans movement as well as more organizing. Thanks to GDX and the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission (IGLHRC). It kicked off with the formation of Transgender, Intersex and Transsexual (TITS-Uganda) and Transgender Education and Advocay (TEA) in Kenya.

Following the first African Gender Identity Workshop for East and Southern Africa held in Cape Town and organized by IGLHRC in collaboration with Gender DynamiX in December 2008, several other trans organizations have been established in the 2 sub regions;
- Trans Bantu in Zambia
- TAMON in Namibia
- The Rainbow Identity Association in Botswana

In addition to that, several LGBTI organizations have set up Transgender Desks. Among them are; Freedom and Roam Uganda (FARUG), Sexual Minorities Uganda (SMUG) while others give support to trans organizations and individuals (Gay and Lesbian Coalition of Kenya, Outright Namibia, Lambda in Mozambique, among others).

Voice of Trans Africa

Who says African Trans people do not exist? Who says we have no voice?

We are everywhere including on the WWW. Now we are even blogging.

Welcome to Voice of Trans Africa. It is one of many spaces where you will find African trans people and issues. Come here everyday to learn something new about Trans Africa. News, testimonies, jokes and more - All Trans Africa.

Enjoy!!!