Chinese transgender man fights for job equality

China Transgender Rights
In this May 18, 2016, photo, a transgender equal rights supporter who goes by the name of “Mr. C” pauses during an interview in Beijing. The 28-year-old transgender man, who keeps his real name secret to protect his parents’ privacy, has become the public face of the fight for job equality in China, where sexual and gender minorities are only beginning to emerge from virtual invisibility. AP

BEIJING — A 28-year-old transgender man who goes by the name of “Mr. C” has become the public face of the fight for job equality in China, where sexual and gender minorities are only beginning to emerge from virtual invisibility.

 

The man, who keeps his real name secret to protect his parents’ privacy, is fighting his dismissal from a medical testing center in court and is seeking a ruling stating that no one should be discriminated against on the basis of gender identity or sexual orientation.

 

“On my shoulders I am carrying the hopes of many, many people,” said Mr. C, who’s been both praised and insulted since filing the country’s first suit against transgender job discrimination earlier this year.

 

“Many people are working toward (employment equality). I cannot let them down. There are many members in our group who are unwilling to or dare not step forward, but they are watching.”

 

While still relatively conservative, Chinese society has grown gradually more accepting of gays, lesbians, bisexuals and transgender people in recent years, particularly among the younger generation. That’s encouraged some members of sexual and gender minorities to come forward and demand their legal rights, with mixed results.

 

In 2014, a Beijing court ruled “conversion therapy” intended to change gays’ sexuality to be illegal. A court in the central province of Hunan shot down an attempt by a gay couple to register their marriage in April.

 

In this photo released by Mr. C, a transgender man who uses the name Mr. C to protect his parents from discrimination, holds up the arbitration results while posing for a photo at a government office in Guiyang in southwestern China’s Guizhou province Tuesday, May 10, 2016. AP

Although never specifically outlawed, alternative expressions of sexuality were frowned upon following the 1949 establishment of the communist People’s Republic, which associated them with the corruption and decadence of the former imperial regime. Those caught up in police raids could be jailed on charges of hooliganism or even executed during particularly severe crackdowns.

 

In 2001, however, the Chinese Psychiatric Association removed homosexuality from its list of mental disorders. Police raids on LGBT gatherings largely came to a halt, as long as they remained low-profile. Empowered by the internet and social media, LGBT groups in different cities began networking, leading to calls for strong legal protections.

 

China has no law addressing employment discrimination, and efforts are ongoing to enact laws protecting minorities in the workplace.

 

A recent United Nations Development Program survey found that only about 5 percent of sexual and gender minorities in China choose to come out in public, and that the workplace can become especially awkward and unpleasant after they do so.

 

“The findings are clear. Sexual and gender minority people in China still live in the shadows,” said the report, which drew on findings from a two-month survey of more than 30,000 people conducted in late 2015.

 

Many LGBT respondents complained of losing jobs through discrimination, and thus had lowered their career hopes and had less desire to acquire new skills, according to the report.

 

Li Yinhe, a prominent Chinese sexologist, said transgender people in particular are more likely to face workplace discrimination because of how they look and dress. “It’s harder for them to disguise themselves,” Li said.

 

Given the prevailing sentiments, Mr. C’s case has brought important public scrutiny to long-ignored issues, Li said.

 

As in Western countries, the business community, rather than the government, is leading the way in China in pushing for equal opportunity, said Steven Bielinski, who has organized social events in Beijing and Shanghai to connect employers with members of the LGBT community.

 

“Here in China I think the LGBT business issue has just reached a tipping point,” Bielinski said. “More and more companies are thinking about what the LGBT community means for business in terms of talent and market.”

 

A job fair in Shanghai on a May weekend attracted a total of 34 companies — twice as many as the year before— including Chinese car-hailing app Didi Chuxing, the career site Kanzhun.com, and multinationals such as 3M, Citigroup and the Boston Consulting Group.

 

It also was the first time that Chinese companies made an appearance, Bielinski said.

 

Despite the interest, Bielinski cautioned against being too optimistic. Organizers declined to allow Associated Press journalists to attend the fairs out of privacy concerns.

 

“It’s just the start,” Bielinski said.

 

In this May 20, 2016, photo, a transgender equal rights supporter who goes by the name of “Mr. C”, left, talks with fellow supporter Waltz Lu as he prepares a speech on transgender workplace discrimination in Beijing. AP

Building on that momentum, Mr. C hopes to nudge the government toward recognizing and protecting LGBT rights.

 

Born female, Mr. C grew up in the southwestern province of Guizhou, a more conservative environment than the eastern cities of Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou. He didn’t even come across the term “transgender” until age 21, when he finally was able to best describe his gender identity.

 

After graduating from college in 2010, Mr. C continued to appear as a woman when applying for jobs. That all changed in 2013, when he began dressing as a man, wearing a buzz cut and growing a mustache.

 

In 2015, he applied for a sales job with Ciming Health Exam Center in the provincial capital of Guiyang, but was let go at the end of the eight-day tryout. He believes he was dismissed because of his gender expression, but the company argued his job performance had been substandard.

 

Mr. C took the dispute to a local labor arbitration panel, which ruled in early May that his dismissal had been legal, while ordering Ciming to pay him $62 in back wages.

 

Days later, Mr. C filed his case in a local court, which has yet to put it on the docket.

 

“Now I place my hope with the law,” he said. “I will do whatever I can do to fight to the end.” TVJ

 

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