Delhi announces pension plan for eunuchs in bid to keep them off the streets
By Dean Nelson, Telegraph, 10 Nov 2010

http://bit.ly/aMHY8u

Thousands of Indian eunuchs are to receive government pensions as
recognition of the hardships faced by the country's 'third sex'.

The Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) has announced it will pay all
adult eunuchs in the capital 1000 rupees (£14) per month as an
acknowledgement that they suffer as much as other minorities and
disadvantaged groups.

The corporation had considered hiring eunuchs as tax collectors, but
abandoned the idea over concerns about their methods.

Under the new scheme, each of the city's 272 councillors has the power
to offer pensions to 700 people. Now eunuchs will be eligible for
these pensions once they have proved their age and status – they will
also need a medical certificate confirming they no longer have male
genitalia.

India has an estimated 1.5 million eunuchs, known locally as 'hijras'
or 'kinnar,' who are both feared and persecuted throughout the
country. Their leaders are campaigning for official recognition as a
'third sex' and reservations for government jobs and university
places.

Most 'kinnar' are men born with deformed genitals who later undergo
dangerous 'village castrations' to complete their transformation,
while others are effeminate boys disowned by their families or sent to
live with eunuch communities and earn their keep through begging.

They were once held in high esteem in India's royal households and
during the Mughal period rose to high positions at court. They were
trusted to guard the royal harems or zenanas because they posed no
sexual threat.

Their decline has mirrored that of royalty itself in the subcontinent,
and today most make a living by singing and dancing at weddings or
soliciting money for 'blessings' from courting couples in public
parks.

Some have taken a more aggressive turn and openly extort money with
threats of violence.

The move by Delhi's local government will not give eunuchs enough to
live on or abandon their need to continue their "tolly" collection
rounds, but officials hope it will encourage them to reform.

"It's more of a symbolic gesture than an actual help, but certainly it
will give them a sense of being a part of the society and help them
rehabilitate," said MCD spokesman Deep Mathur.

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"lgbtdiscuss" group.
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/lgbtdiscuss?hl=en-GB.

Reply via email to