House of Lords

Government receives scrutiny in House of Lords on GRA reform

Today member of the House of Lords questioned the Baroness Berridge, Minister for Women, on the Government’s Response to the Consultation on the Gender Recognition Act 2004.

Lord Collins said:

A consultation over 2 years, over 100,000 responses, the vast majority backing reform. The result – a continuation of lengthy process that the Women and Equalities Committee said “runs contrary to the dignity and personal autonomy of applicants.”

What evidence does the Noble Lord have that medicalisation remains necessary from the jurisdictions which don’t medicalise the process?

The APPG on Global Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Rights presented a report to Liz Truss in July.

We sought to deliver reassurance around trans people -but also to deliver trans rights. Did the Noble Lord see or consider the report & can she explain why it was rejected? - bearing in mind it was backed by the LGBT Groups of the main political parties including her own.

This decision has caused huge hurt to the trans community and Labour believes is simply wrong.

Baroness Barker stated that:

Digitising a system which dehumanises our fellow citizens isn't kindness. It is callous and cynical, as the repeated use of the phrase "trans people and women" makes clear. One question for the Minister. Will the Government amend the Equality Act or guidance issued under it. Yes or no?

Lord Cashman said:

My Lords, the Secretary of State’s response is woefully inadequate and fails to take account of the Government’s own consultation, so it is clear to me that the Secretary of State is not in command of this brief. Indeed, it took her four and a half months to respond to my letter on this issue—this is at a time when gross defamation and misrepresentation of trans people, particularly trans women, has been whipped up by the media and some Members of your Lordships’ House.

Therefore, will the Minister explain how the Government will address the real needs of trans people, as indicated overwhelmingly in the consultation, and will she clarify the statement by the Secretary of State that self-declaration would be abused by men? What evidence of widespread abuse does the Secretary of State have from other jurisdictions that have moved to self-ID, or does the Secretary of State believe that British men are uniquely abusive?

The debate can be watched in full here, and the Hansard record here.

Former Chair of APPG Introduced to House of Lords

Congratulations to Nick Herbert, Lord Herbert of South Downs, the APPG’s former Chair and now member of the House of Lords.

We look forward to continue working with Lord Herbert in his new role.

Lord Collins of Highbury raises LGBT+ rights in Commonwealth in Queen's Speech Debate

During the Queen’s Speech debate today in the House of Lords, APPG Treasurer Lord Collins of Highbury questioned the Government on their human rights commitments and work on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), and particularly LGBT+ rights, calling for a greater effort to ensure the decriminalisation of homosexuality across the Commonwealth.

If, as the noble Lord, Lord Ahmad, argued yesterday, the UK’s foreign policy is to be used to promote our values and not only our commercial interests, then I would have expected a greater focus on human rights and a review of the Government’s regime for arms exports.

He added that there should be more consistency between the FCO and the DIT with regards to human rights positions:

As the noble Baroness, Lady Tonge, said yesterday, we have an FCO condemning human rights abuses and a Department for International Trade supporting closer relationships—constant mixed messages.

In terms of the UK’s role as Commonwealth chair-in-office, he said that:

Many noble Lords mentioned the role of the Commonwealth, and I certainly recognise its importance. It is a family of nations that, through its charter, provides the means to promote the values of democracy, transparency, the rule of law and human rights. The Minister the noble Lord, Lord Ahmad, referred to our role as chair-in-office, but where are we on the commitments we made at the end of CHOGM? Despite some progress, we still have Commonwealth countries where LGBT people face not only discrimination and anti-gay laws but increased violence. I hope that, in the Minister’s response, we can have greater detail as to how we are supporting efforts to ensure the decriminalisation of homosexuality.

Lord Collins also raised the Government’s approach to the SDGs. Many have argued that the SDGs can also be a powerful tool for LGBT+ inclusion.

If the Government were serious about Britain’s part in creating a just, safe, secure and sustainable planet, free from the fear of hunger and poverty, then I would have expected a clear focus in the gracious Speech on the United Nations 2030 agenda, building a unified approach to deliver the sustainable development goals and to ensure that we leave nobody behind. The Government could have used the gracious Speech to signal a new approach to the SDGs by creating a new policy unit in No. 10 dedicated to them, with a Cabinet Minister responsible for co-ordinating across Whitehall.

The full transcript can be found here.

The full video is here.

Baroness Barker questions the Government on protecting the rights of LGBT people & minorities in trade deals

Yesterday APPG Vice Chair Baroness Barker spoke in the House of Lords during a debate on human rights and future trade deals. She asked the Government whether future trade deals will include commitments to the rights of LGBT and other minority communities and whether the deals will be subject to parliamentary scrutiny.

Her full speech is below:

My Lords, I welcome the noble Baroness, Lady Berridge, to her position. She and I have had many an interesting discussion on the ​subject of equal rights and I look forward to continuing that in the Chamber as well as outside. I thank the noble and right reverend Lord, Lord Harries, for calling this debate, which draws attention to a part of the Brexit process that has received very little comment but is, for some of us, extremely important. I say that as a person who, as a citizen of this country, owes my equality—as a member of the LGBT community—to a string of court judgments that were fought tooth and nail by Governments of this country of different political persuasions. The European courts have been a source of great comfort to some of us from different minority groups and we are very fearful that we might have to live within a future where that protection is removed. I do not need to remind the noble Baroness that three times since 2016, the Conservative Party has announced that it will retain the Human Rights Act until 2020, at which point it will be replaced by what it refers to as “a British Bill of Rights”.

We are told that those rights will be equivalent but I have some fears, from where I stand, given the correlation between Members of another place who support Brexit and those who have been opponents of equality for people like me. There is a great deal of fear in our community that we will be in no position to tell the rest of the world how to maintain human rights, and that at a future point we may well diverge dramatically from a growing body of European law passed in the light of future judgments. I say that as somebody who has in recent years been able to see for myself the good effect that membership of the European Union has had in places such as the Balkans or in the Baltic countries, which, in order to meet accession terms, have had to put in place laws protecting the rights of minorities. I fear that leaving the European Union—if that were to happen—would undermine that quite considerably.

I follow the noble Baroness, Lady Bottomley, in saying that I do not think any kind of theoretical commitment to human rights really matters; it is their practical effect. In our community, we are beginning to gather growing evidence to show that those countries with a good legal basis for equality—and have good practice of equality—actually benefit from it in economic terms. Conversely, it is possible to draw a direct correlation between those with human rights abuses. As the noble Lord, Lord Whitty, said, there is considerable concern about leaving our largest market, in which the people with whom we trade are bound by common standards and laws in relation to equalities. I am sure we do business with some countries that have dreadful human rights. We do a great deal of business with countries with dreadful human rights records, but they are not now a sufficiently significant part of our trade to override our laws. We wonder whether they might be in future. We are talking, at the end of the day, about the capacity of people to start businesses and build jobs, here and abroad.

I want briefly to follow up the point of the noble and right reverend Lord, Lord Harries, about future scrutiny. I have a very personal view. When human rights are under threat, we have to be as vigilant as a hawk. There is much that this House needs to do to scrutinise future trade deals. Having done some research, as it stands there is only one example of an international ​trade deal that recognises gender identity and sexual orientation as grounds for discrimination in its labour chapter, and contains measures to ensure that these grounds are enforceable. It is, would you believe, Article 23.9 of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement, which says:

The Parties recognize the goal of eliminating discrimination in employment and occupation, and support the goal of promoting equality of women in the workplace. Accordingly, each Party shall implement policies that it considers appropriate to protect workers against employment discrimination on the basis of sex (including with regard to sexual harassment), pregnancy, sexual orientation, gender identity, and caregiving responsibilities; provide job-protected leave for birth or adoption of a child and care of family members; and protect against wage discrimination”.

My questions are as follows. Can we look forward—once we get beyond the platitudes we hear from some on the Government Benches that the level of rights and protections we have will, of course, in future be at least equivalent to what it is now—to a time when we have commitments of that kind in our trade agreements? Will we have a mechanism by which Members of both Houses of Parliament can scrutinise those agreements, not just when they are drawn up but when they are implemented? Or do we, as I fear, run the risk that the rights of people like me might just end up on the bonfire of some kind of ERG-DUP Brexit?

Lord Harries of Pentregarth (Crossbench), who proposed the debate, also mentioned LGBT+ rights, commenting that;

Then there is the denial of basic rights for LGBT people in so many Commonwealth countries. This too we must not forget but must work for changes in the laws of those countries. We cannot accept that there is freedom for LGBT people in one country but not in others. […]

With the continuing denial of human rights in so many countries, it may be that any British Government would get weary of raising these issues with the Governments concerned. We must not get weary or shrug our shoulders. If those suffering individuals do not have a voice through us, where will they have one? We must continue to press for the observance of human rights wherever they are denied, even when we are anxious to trade with the countries concerned. After Brexit, this House and the other place will have a particular responsibility to scrutinise trade agreements, to ensure that maximising trade is not done at the expense of ignoring human rights considerations.

Baroness Barker: The UK should protect the rights of people with Variations of Sex Characteristics and ban unnecessary surgeries on VSC children

Our Vice-Chair Baroness Barker has written for Openly on the rights of people with Variations of Sex Characteristics.

The United Kingdom should protect the rights of people with Variations of Sex Characteristics and ban unnecessary surgeries on VSC children

Baroness Barker is the LGBT+ spokeswoman in the House of Lords for the British Liberal Democrat party

Variations of sex characteristics (VSC) intersex is an umbrella termed that describes people born with bodies that do not fit the typical definitions of male or female. There are no reliable statistics on how many VSC intersex people exist, but one thing is certain – they have no legal protection.

For many decades, infants born with VSC intersex have undergone surgery to align their bodies with the sex their parents deem most appropriate. Some parents consent to these invasive procedures on medical advice when under pressure to register the birth.

Often when people hit puberty it becomes apparent that the surgery was either merely cosmetic or caused pain and suffering, which can often endure for many years.

People who are VSC intersex describe what happens to them as infant genital mutilation (IGM). Many suffer life-long health problems and many cannot trust health professionals, finding any involvement with the NHS so traumatic that they avoid contact until any illness they have becomes intolerable.

Earlier this year, in its sixth report on Great Britain and Northern Ireland, the UN Committee Against Torture made two main recommendations.

First, that the parents or guardians of intersex children receive impartial counselling services and psychological and social support, including information about deferring any decision on unnecessary treatment until they can be carried out with the full, free and informed consent of the person concerned.

Second, that anyone who has been subjected to such procedures without their consent and which result in severe pain and suffering, should be able to obtain redress, including the means for rehabilitation.

Medical professionals often justify their advocacy of paediatric surgery by arguing that VSC intersex children will be laughed at in school. These days, when safeguarding schoolchildren of all ages is taken seriously and excellent initiatives such as the NSPCC’s Talking PANTS rules are available to protect the bodily integrity of all children – particularly from sexual abuse – such arguments seem weak.

I have listened to VSC intersex people talk about what was done to them and many of the stories are harrowing. While the NHS continues to be happy to perform paediatric surgery, there is no overall care strategy or guidelines for medical practitioners.

Urologists, endocrinologists, emergency medicine practitioners receive no training and have no specialists to whom they can turn for advice. VSC intersex patients give examples of inappropriate questioning or being made to feel like freaks – that is simply inexcusable.

This year, the government conducted a call for evidence about the needs of VSC intersex people and the results of this will be known shortly.

This week, I am asking a question in the House of Lords, the British upper house of parliament, about the protection of the human rights of VSC intersex people of all ages. They experience discrimination in many ways, in employment, education, sports and access to public services.

The government could address many of these issues by strengthening equality law in the area of protection of sex characteristics.

Other countries, most notably Malta, have changed their equalities legislation to protect the human rights of VSC intersex people. Moreover, the government of Malta, which included amongst its ministers a paediatric surgeon, made surgical intervention on children (or IGM) illegal.

The nations of the United Kingdom should do likewise without delay.

Intersex/VSC Issues raised in the UK Parliament for the first time

On Monday 9 September, APPG Vice Chair Baroness Barker raised intersex issues for the first time in the UK Parliament, asking an oral question on what the government is doing to uphold the rights of all intersex VSC people in the UK.

Peers raised the issue of unnecessary surgery on intersex infants and children, the lack of data surrounding intersex people and the types of interventions performed in NHS hospitals, the need to update the Equality Act 2010 to include variations of sex characteristics, the importance of ensuring appropriate training and awareness raising on intersex issues for health professionals and public officials, including legislators, the judiciary and policymakers, as well as parents and the general public, and the need for more child and adolescent psychiatrists with expertise on intersex issues.

You can watch the video.

You can read the full transcript from Hansard.