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Kuwait court overturns law criminalising transgender people

Kuwait’s constitutional court has struck down a contentious law long used to criminalise transgender people forbidding the “imitation of the opposite sex.”
After weeks of deliberation and years of campaigning human rights groups, the court ruled that the vague law policing people who dress and behave like the opposite sex was “inconsent with the constitution’s keenness to ensure and preserve personal freedom.”
The law had set the maximum penalty for cross-dressing at one-year in prison or a fine of USD 3,300.
The decision was hailed as a liberal counterweight to the conservative politics in Kuwait, a Gulf Arab sheikhdom where homosexual relations are criminalised with up to seven years in prison.
Amnesty International welcomed the overturning of the penal code’s Article 198 as “a major breakthrough” for the rights of transgender people in the region.
Similar laws criminalise transgender expression across the conservative Arabian Peninsula.

Throughout the Arab world, gay, lesbian and transgender people face legal and social discrimination and other formidable obstacles to living their lives openly.
“Article 198 was deeply discriminatory, overly vague and never should have been accepted into law in the first place,” said Lynn Maalouf, deputy director of Amnesty’s Middle East and North Africa division, while urging caution about the decision’s ultimate impact and enforcement.

Kuwaiti authorities “must also immediately halt arbitrary arrests of transgender people and drop all charges and convictions brought against them,” Maalouf added.
Transgender woman Maha al-Mutairi, for instance, was sentenced last October to two years in prison for “imitating the opposite sex online,” Human Rights Watch has reported.

She remains in detention at Kuwait’s Central Prison for men.
On Thursday, conservative Islam lawmakers in Kuwait blasted the court ruling as shameful and vowed to fight it.

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