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Beyond The Binary

Trans, bisexual, queer and lesbian women and others remain outside of the purview of a 바카라feminist바카라 UCC

Photo: Getty Images

19-year-old Shree* (name changed) ran away with her partner, another young woman from the same village in West Bengal바카라s Howrah district, in 2020. Shree had been married to a man from her village who had grown up with her. But soon after, she realised her heart was elsewhere. 바카라I was in love with my best friend for years. But it was much later that I realised that this was not just friendship,바카라 she says. After six years of marriage, Shree decided to run away with her partner. She had a young son whom she left behind. Now, Shree and her partner live in a rented room in Kolkata. They work odd jobs to make a living but make sure to maintain secrecy. Shree isn바카라t formally divorced. She misses her child but she knows that society won바카라t accept her relationship with a woman. If I return, they won바카라t let me leave,바카라 she says, referring to her family and in-laws. 

Shree is one among thousands of other queer persons in India who face discrimination, hardships and even violence for expressing their sexual orientation and gender identity. These issues, faced by members of the LGBTQIA community, do not usually get covered by the ambit of family laws. Yet the queer community is often directly affected by laws around marriage, inheritance, custody and adoption of children, which are under the purview of personal laws.

With the debates over the Uniform Civil Code (UCC)바카라a pet project of the BJP for years바카라gaining steam in the run up to the 2024 General Elections, critics have been questioning the validity of the claim. The Indian government바카라s penchant for the UCC has been propped on the assertion that rep­lacing family laws would bring about empowerment for women. In other words, it has been pitched as feminist legal reform. A closer look at the UCC in its current form and the discourse around it, however, reveals that though purportedly feminist, the reform seems to ignore sexual minorities including lesbians and trans-women.

바카라Queer marriage itself is still taboo in India, leg­ally as well as socially. So a UCC alone is not going to resolve many key issues that the queer community faces,바카라 says Sophia Rajkumari, lawyer and queer legal expert from Imphal, Manipur. 바카라For many in the queer community, it is still a fight for identity. In such a situation, it is hard to see how a UCC will have a positive impact on the queer community,바카라 she adds.

If implemented thoughtfully, the UCC may open up ways for the LGBTQIA community to live dignified lives.

It is not just the right to marriage that is denied to queer couples but also the right to adoption and custody of children which remain contested questions for the community. In 2019, the government had passed the Surrogacy (Regulation) Bill which denied live-in and same-sex couples permission to commissioning surrogates.

Moreover, trans activist Grace Banu adds that there are at present no guidelines in the UCC relevant to the queer community. In July 2018, members of feminist queer organisation wrote to the Law Commission of India with suggestions on family laws and seeking guidelines for the community within the UCC framework. One such suggestion included the request for the commission to issue guidelines for people to register their legal representatives through affidavits or other methods which are accessible and easy to execute with a standard format to streamline the process of inheritance among LGBT communities. 바카라No such guidelines have been provided,바카라 Banu states.

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In terms of transgender rights, Banu argues that before demanding for a UCC, the trans community needs to focus on seeking separate horizontal reservations. 바카라Reservations will bring empowerment, and allow minorities like the trans community to enter spaces of discourse and impact policies like the UCC, she states. 바카라Without reservation, we won바카라t be able to call the nation or its institutions truly diverse,바카라 she adds, suggesting that reservations will allow for more transgender people to

access education and employment.

However, marriage equality for transgender people is still a distant dream. 바카라Despite the NALSA verdict and decriminalisation of Section 377, the trans community in India has very few rights and continue to remain invisible,바카라 says Vyjyanti Vasanta Mogli, trans activist and one of the petitioners for marriage equality in the Supreme Court represented by Advocate Jaina Kothari. She states that at the moment, even marriage equality seems unattainable. 바카라Marriage is essentially part of civil code, it isn바카라t part of criminal procedures. But it is absurd that many of the ones who are so vociferously resisting marriage equality are also the ones pushing for UCC,바카라 she states. 바카라We await the verdict. Until then, it바카라s hard to say if the UCC will have any impact on the LGBTQIA community,바카라 Mogli states.

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At present, if implemented thoughtfully and is inc­lusive of gender and sexual minorities, the UCC may open up ways for the LGBTQIA community to live dignified lives. But members of the community feel that the UCC does not directly make them a priority. 바카라It just shows that no government actually cares about the LGBTQIA community바카라s needs. In its present iteration, UCC is likely to only benefit some Savarna women,바카라 says Banu.

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