Kuwait Police Abused Transgender Women: HRW
January 15, 2012
Rasha Moumneh, researcher for the Middle East and North Africa Human Rights Watch (HRW), speaks during a press conference in Kuwait City on Sunday, where HRW accused Kuwaiti police of torturing and sexually abusing transgender women and called on the Gulf state to hold officers accountable. (AFP Photo) Related articles
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Kuwait City. Human Rights Watch on Sunday accused Kuwaiti police of torturing and sexually abusing transgender women and called on the Gulf state to hold officers accountable.
In a report, the New York-based group said that police have been using a “discriminatory” amendment to the penal code passed by parliament in 2007 which arbitrarily criminalizes “imitating the opposite sex.”
Transgender women are individuals who are born male but identify themselves as female.
The arbitrary and ill-defined provisions of the law have allowed numerous abuses to take place against them, said the 63-page report based on interviews with 40 transgender women, as well as with interior ministry officials, lawyers, doctors, and members of civil society.
The accusations were based on the accounts of the 40 victims “all of whom gave almost a similar story on what they faced,” Rasha Moumneh, HRW’s Middle East and North Africa researcher, told a press conference in Kuwait City.
“We have met with officials from the interior ministry ... and presented the findings to them but have not yet received any response,” Moumneh said, adding that Human Rights Watch does not know the exact number of transgender women in Kuwait.
Kuwaiti police have a free rein to determine whether a person’s appearance constitutes “imitating the opposite sex,” without any specific criteria being laid down for the offence, the report said.
Transgender women reported being arrested even when they were wearing male clothes and then later being forced by police to dress in women’s clothing.
In some cases documented by Human Rights Watch, transgender women said police arrested them because they had a “soft voice” or “smooth skin.”
“No one — regardless of his or her gender identity — deserves to be arrested on the basis of a vague, arbitrary law and then abused and tortured by police,” Sarah Leah Whitson, HRW’s Middle East director, said in a statement.
“The Kuwaiti government has a duty to protect all of its residents, including groups who face popular disapproval, from brutal police behavior and the application of an unfair law,” the statement said.
Abuses include degrading and humiliating treatment, such as being forced to strip and paraded around police stations, being forced to dance for officers, sexual humiliation, verbal taunts and intimidation, HRW said.
“In several cases, Human Rights Watch found that police officers took advantage of the law to blackmail transgender women into sex,” the report said.
Redress for these violations was difficult for fear of retribution and re-arrest, said the rights watchdog.
“HRW calls on the Kuwaiti government to repeal the amendment to article 198, criminalizing imitating the opposite sex,” the report said.
Pending repeal of the law, the interior ministry should issue a moratorium on arrests of individuals and the government also should work to protect transgender individuals, it said.
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