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India Adds Third Gender Option to Voting Rolls: ’Other’

by Kilian Melloy
Friday Nov 13, 2009
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Transsexual and intersex people going to the polls in India will no longer have to choose between identifying themselves as male or female, now that a third category for gender has been added.

The new option--"O" for "Other"--has been added alongside the "M" and "F" choices for use by transsexual people, eunuchs, intersex people (born with indeterminate genitalia), or those who for various reasons do not identify themselves according to binary gender. Though the percentages of such people in any given community may be small, in a country of one billion--and a voting roll of more than 700 million--the raw numbers are large enough to warrant a third category.

A Nov. 12 CNN article reported that India’s electoral authorities had released a statement announcing that, "Enumerators and booth-level officers (BLOs) shall be instructed to indicate the sex of eunuchs/transsexuals etc as ’O’ if they so desire, while undertaking any house-to-house enumeration/verification of any application."

The new option follows the decriminalization of consensual sexual intimacy between adults earlier this year in India. In December, the country’s first transgender beauty pageant--the "Miss India" contest--is scheduled to take place.

In the United States, transgender individuals still face difficulties with certain everyday practicalities, such as restroom rights or obtaining forms of identification, such as driver’s licenses, that are appropriate to their gender identities.

Kilian Melloy reviews media, conducts interviews, and writes commentary for EDGEBoston, where he also serves as Assistant Arts Editor.

Comments

  • BB, 2009-11-14 10:59:49

    That really is comical. Nature took about 200 million years, and trillions of kilograms of deoxyribonucleic acid to forge two sexes for the purposes of reproduction. Now in less than 25 years of worldwide political correctness, mankind has invented a third.

  • Anonymous, 2009-11-14 12:35:40

    Actually, nature has produced variations on the male/ female possibilities from the very beginning. Intersex people (once known as hermaphrodites) have always been around.

  • BB, 2009-11-15 08:40:15

    Hermaphrodism is not passed on from parent to sibling in statistically significant enough numbers to suggest it is a generally unexpressed (recessive) trait. It is simply a genetic "mistake" much like two-headed snakes and albino elephants. A physical confusion of gender serves no reproductive purpose and has no corollary in the ability of certain amphibians and lower fauna to simultaneously switch sexual traits in the absence of a suitable breeding population.

  • BB, 2009-11-15 12:45:57

    Oh, my little twinkies, I wear your sour little one-star ratings with the greatest delight and pride! Like robotic leftists everywhere, you cannot endure deviation from your orthodoxy without going into paroxysms of rage and petulance.

  • K2T, 2009-11-16 14:01:13

    Then XY is a genetic "mistake" from XX.

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