The Indian Express on October 12, 2010.

Chinki Sinha
New Delhi, October 11, 2010

It was a fight for a column, a space where the numerous transgender
could affirm their identity and not be compartmentalized into either
male or female.
With Bihar becoming the first state to implement the Election
Commission's mandate to have a separate column “Other” in the voter
enrolment and registration, Dr. SE Huda, a Bareilly-based doctor who
had approached the apex body that conducts elections in 2009 asking
them to recognize the third gender, feels vindicated.
It is not just the Election Commission that took the lead so “others
could follow suit” as per the Chief Election Commissioner SY Quershi,
now the UIDAI, a Planning Commission initiative to accord identity to
all Indian residents, has also extended the gender identity and
inclusion to “Transgender” on their enrolment forms and their
database.
The UIDAI enrolment form will now have “M”, “F” and “T” so the one
million eunuchs can register as themselves.“It was a legitimate demand
and we said let others follow out example. It is a good thing that the
UIDAI is doing it. In the voter enrolment, the officials refused to
register them as females because of their male voice so we decided to
do this,” Chief Election Commissioner SY Quershi said.
“There was some representation to Navin Chawla and we immediately
decided to do it. It is an all India instruction but starts with Bihar
in the upcoming elections.”In February 2010 the election commission of
India allowed intersex and transsexuals the right to register as
voters with “Other”.
This was what Bareilly-based Dr. SE Huda, secretary of Syed Shah
Farzand Ali Educational & Social Foundation of India, which has
offices in Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat, Uttar Pradesh and
Delhi where they work with women, children and eunuchs, fought for. At
a conference for third gender equality in Bareilly in April 2009, his
organization had decided they would take this up with the Election
Commission, with the Census, and with the UIDAI, so the right identity
is accorded and statistical data on the number of transgender in the
country becomes available. Dr. Huda was also called to Delhi by former
chief election commissioner Navin Chawla to discuss his work with the
community and how to reach out this segment of voters with a low
voting rate.
In August, the UIDAI wrote back to Barielly-based doctor Huda that the
authority had already provided a third option – transgender – on their
enrolment form and in the database. The 30-year-old doctor had asked
the Planning Commission to include the “third sex” to accord them
their rightful identity so they could access various government
welfare schemes like the Tamil Nadu government's scheme of a welfare
board and free sex reassignment surgeries at the government hospitals
for the transgenders and the Karnataka's government pension scheme for
the members of the community. For the UIDAI Huda's letter was an
endorsement of sorts, and a reassurance that they were in the right
direction with the marginalized community, UIDAI Deputy Director
General K. Ganga said.
Ganga had responded to Dr. Huda's RTI application and she told Indian
Express that the Demographic Data Standard and Verification Procedure
Committee had already decided to capture the information whether a
person was transgender though it wasn't their mandate to collect
statistical data on eunuchs way back in December 2009, something that
Dr. Huda wanted. "We had received this letter and I was the one who
had responded," Ganga said. "We wrote to the President office who Huda
had also written to telling them we could capture the gender but that
would not be for statistical purpose. For us, it was an endorsement of
our plans." In future, the UIDAI may also partner with groups and
organizations that work with the transgender community.
Around five years ago, a transgender person had asked for an
appointment at a hospital in Barielly but at 10 in the morning she
didn't turn up at the hospital. She came later in the evening and Dr.
Huda, a 30-year-old doctor who wrote to the UIDAI earlier this year to
ask them to include the third sex on their enrollment form, asked her
why she didn't come earlier.
She was in pain as she was suffering with cervical spondylitis and
pain was radiating towards her heart and her limbs had become numb.
But even acute pain couldn't bring her to go to the hospital earlier.
She asked if he wanted her to go through yet another round of
humiliation in a crowded general OPD ward. Dr. Huda recalled he didn't
know what to say.
“She asked me if I had the courage to diagnose her in front of
everyone,” Dr. Huda said. “That led me to work towards the inclusion
of the transgender in the mainstream society. I had followed it up. It
is good that they did it."
regards---
dr.s.e.huda
09837357723

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