spot_img
28.7 C
Philippines
Sunday, September 8, 2024

Protest after Peru says transsexuality a mental disorder

- Advertisement -

LGBTQ groups protested Friday outside Peru’s health ministry after the government issued a decree listing transsexualism as a mental disorder.

“It is a decree that takes us back three decades,” said Jorge Apolaya, spokesman of the Collective Pride March, a Lima-based rights group.

“We cannot live in a country where we are considered sick,” he said.

Transgender people are those who reject the sex they were assigned at birth. Some opt for surgical or medical intervention.

The government on May 10 updated its list of insurable health conditions – which since 2021 has offered benefits for mental health treatment – to include services for transgender people.

In the decree, the health ministry describes the condition as a “mental disorder” – an obsolete term long officially abandoned by the World Health Organization.

More than 200 activists gathered outside the health ministry to demand the revocation of the decree on Friday – the International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia and Transphobia.

“It is a regulation that violates us … they are positioning us as sick people, as if we have a problem,” said 25-year-old Afrika Nakamura.

With slogans like “It’s not a disease, it’s diversity!” and “We are trans and we are not sick,” the protesters blocked the busy avenue in front of the ministry for a few hours.

No clashes with police were reported.

“We demand the repeal of this transphobic and violent decree, which goes against our trans identities in Peru,” activist Gianna Camacho of the Coordinacion Nacional LGTBIQ+ told AFP.

“We are not mentally ill and we do not suffer from any mental disorder,” she added.

LATEST NEWS

Popular Articles