Lahore, Jan 10 – Pakistan will count transgender people in its national census for the first time when it surveys its population in March this year following a top court ruling.
The Lahore High Court issued the order to the government, National Database and Registration Authority, and the interior ministry with a government official assuring the court that the transgender community will be part of the 2017 census, the Times Of India reported.
This stemmed from a petition filed by transgender Waqar Ali last November that argued Pakistan’s transgender community had been marginalised and their fundamental rights should be recognised by including them in the sixth national census.
Lahore High Court Chief Justice Syed Mansoor Ali Shah passed the order, issuing directives to enforce the transgender community’s basic rights.
The move was welcomed by Pakistan’s transgender community. “We are glad that we will be counted as will be other people,” transgender rights worker Almas Bobby told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
“Hope we get equal citizenship and equal status.” There are no official figures on the number of transgender people living in Pakistan but advocacy group Trans Action estimates there are at least 500,000 in the country with a population of 190 million.
In 2012, Pakistan’s Supreme Court declared equal rights for transgender citizens, including the right to inherit property and assets, preceded a year earlier by the right to vote. But shunned by mainstream society, transgender individuals in Pakistan are still often forced into begging, prostitution or
dancing to earn a living.
However transgender people are also sometimes venerated in the South Asian tradition of according spiritual powers to eunuchs and others who fall outside traditional gender divisions.