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Twenty-one-year-old Sobhan Mukherjee has come up with a unique initiative in Kolkata – separate toilets for the transgender community.
The move has been widely hailed as it is perhaps for the first time in India that such toilets have been conceived for the transgender people who are still considered pariahs.
Mukherjee managed to convince his local municipal councillor, Anita Kar Majumdar, to set aside two washrooms exclusively for the ‘others’ in the four pay-and-use toilets, in south Kolkata’s Bansdroni area.
He has named the toilets ‘Tridhara’ (third power) as he considers that the transgender community is the third power in the society after the male and the female. The young graduate says that he was deeply moved by the indifferent attitude towards the community and always wanted to do something for them.
The young graduate certainly deserves kudos for his work, but according to members belonging to the third sex a lot needs to be done.
Opening a toilet, that too by an individual, shows the lacklustre approach by the government in lending a helping hand to the transgender community.
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The Centre had issued a directive in April this year that allowed transgender individuals to use toilets for men and women in the country.
On 3 April 2017, the Ministry of Drinking Water and Sanitation issued guidelines to the Swachh Bharat Gramin Mission and stated that members belonging to the third gender should be allowed to use public toilets, either male or female, of their choice. The statement mentioned that a “conscious effort” should be made to ensure that members of the transgender community are “recognised as equal citizens and users of toilets” under the ‘inclusivity’ norm.
Earlier, the Supreme Court in 2014 had recognised transgender people as the ‘third gender,’ which also included an order for separate toilets for members of the community in public places, but is yet to be implemented across the country.
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The transgender community says that the concept of inclusivity is a far cry as they are not allowed to use public toilets and face harassment on a daily basis.
Even the West Bengal government cannot escape from its own share of blame. The government had set up a Transgender Development Board in March 2015 with an aim to look into the educational, employment and healthcare needs of the community.
The board comprising 12 members included representatives from the transgender community with the Women and Child Development Minister Shashi Panja as its chairman.
The minister had said that states like Tamil Nadu and Maharashtra have transgender development bodies but those are meant for welfare and not development.
Ranjita Sinha, who represents the community in the development board, has no qualms in admitting that nothing significant has been done by the government two years after the formation of the board.
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Her anger is not without reason as there is no accurate data regarding the number of transgender individuals in West Bengal. The 2011 Census had pegged their number at 30,349 across the state. But those working with the community believe that over one lakh transgender people and hijras live in the state.
The allegations about the board not functioning properly were scoffed at by the state minister, Shashi Panja, who said that there was progress on this front.
(The writer is a Kolkata-based freelance journalist.)
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