The Phnom Penh Post

Trans violence widespread

- Erin Handley and Kong Meta

SENRITH Sereyroth remembers with horrifying clarity the day she was gang-raped. It was in 2005, 10 years after Sereyroth, a transgende­r woman, began working in the sex trade. Standing near Independen­ce Monument, she was approached by two men with $10. They took her to an unknown location, where 10 men were waiting.

“When they realised that I am not a girl, they hit me and stripped me naked,” she said.

Now a case manager at Men’s Health Cambodia, she said she didn’t report the case to the authoritie­s. The police, especially in Daun Penh district, were often the ones perpetrati­ng violence against her and other so-called “ladyboys”.

“When I stand at Wat Phnom, they round us up. They hit us with the gun, and kick us. They said we make anarchy in public,” she said.

Sereyroth is not alone. Her experience mirrors those of other ladyboys selling sex on the streets of Phnom Penh.

A study newly published in the March issue of Dignity, a journal on sexual exploitati­on and violence, found that 74 percent of ladyboys – a Southeast Asian concept chosen by the authors because it connotes more gender fluidity than Western conception­s of transgende­rism – had suffered sex- ual harassment in the previous year, and 40 percent had suffered physical assault. Of the 50 ladyboy sex workers surveyed, more than half reported they were forced to have sex against their wishes, while one in five said their first-ever sexual encounter was forced or coerced.

Physical assault often came directly from the hands of the police. “They chase us like dogs,” one respondent said.

“Respondent­s reported being dehumanize­d, framed, and raped at gunpoint by law enforcemen­t,” the report reads.

But National Police spokesman Kirth Chantharit­h denied any wrongdoing on behalf of the authoritie­s. “Police never hit or attack the transgende­r [people] . . . Would they attack them just for being sex workers? It is nonsense to say that,” he said.

“If there are obvious cases, please report them to us and we will punish them by law.”

However, the report’s findings align with research by the Cambodian Center for Human Rights, which found that transgende­r sex workers “face shocking levels of abuse”.

“The police, who are responsibl­e for protecting the rights of trans women, are actually among the worst perpetrato­rs,” said CCHR’s Nuon Sidara.

“CCHR has received many complaints of physical and sexual abuse of trans women by police, as well as arbitrary arrests, extortion and cruel and inhuman treatment such as forced bathing in rivers as extralegal punishment.”

The culminatio­n of stigma and discrimina­tion, according to the report, often cut ladyboys out of jobs, their homes, education and even access to basic health services, which left them feeling like sex work was their only option – a “perceived fatalism” that was frequently mired in self-blame, shame and guilt.

For report co-author Glenn Miles, the report demonstrat­es “how incredibly vulnerable transgende­r are in Phnom Penh to violence”.

“It also showed how often they conflate their identity of transgende­r with also being a sex worker instead of seeing that having a loving caring relationsh­ip is possible,” he said.

Co-author Jarrett Davis said the surveys saw them“stumbling across the highest rates of violence we have seen in research we have done”, adding that said violence was sometimes seen as part and parcel with the ladyboy identity – one which is often perceived as hypersexua­lised. “They weren’t receiving violence because they identified as women, but because they are males that did not fit a narrow definition of what was expected of them as males,” he said.

Davis said one of the most compelling findings was based on a question about reincarnat­ion – while more than half wanted to be reborn as a biological woman, nearly a third didn’t mind, as long as it was a “definite” man or woman.

“It was a really common thread [for them to say]: ‘I just want something definite, I want a place’.”

 ?? HONG MENEA ?? A participan­t speaks out about her experience­s as a transgende­r woman in 2016. A new report examines the stigma and discrimina­tion faced by so-called ‘ladyboys’ that often leaves them feeling like sex work is their only option.
HONG MENEA A participan­t speaks out about her experience­s as a transgende­r woman in 2016. A new report examines the stigma and discrimina­tion faced by so-called ‘ladyboys’ that often leaves them feeling like sex work is their only option.

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