Identified as “female” on his Hong Kong ID, transgender activist Henry Tse waged an arduous legal battle to have his real gender recognized.
Six years later, he won the case to change his gender marker to “male” at the city’s top court — a victory he hopes will help make life easier for Hong Kong’s trans community as a whole.
“I had no choice,” Tse said of his lawsuit, which he fought alongside another trans man identified as Q by the court.
Photo: AFP
“[My] ID card says ‘female,’ which is clearly different from my real gender identity, it’s wrong. Carrying such a card, even if all other information on it is correct ... people won’t believe it is me,” Tse said.
Frequently facing rejection and humiliation when trying to complete simple tasks like checking into a hotel or going to the gym, all he wanted was a “normal life.”
Tse knew his fight for recognition would be tough, but he never imagined it would be so long.
Q saif the win felt like “accomplishing mission impossible.”
“We just want the same rights that everyone else has, and to fight for our dignity,” he said.
Until now, trans adults in Hong Kong could only change their IDs by proving they had had an operation to alter their genitalia.
In its Feb. 6 verdict, the Court of Final Appeal found requiring transgender people to undergo surgery to change their IDs unconstitutional, saying it imposed “an unacceptably harsh burden” on Tse and Q.
Following Tse and Q’s victory, the Security Bureau said it would “seek legal advice on follow-up actions.”
Hong Kong does not have any overall legislation on gender identity, and a government task force set up in 2017 has yet to issue an update.
Human Rights Watch said the recent ruling was “limited in scope.”
Still, the verdict sends “a strong message” to the authorities to “reform Hong Kong’s outdated criteria for legally recognizing trans people.”
Dozens of nations have adopted laws around gender identity, with some — including Argentina, Denmark and Spain — allowing legal recognition of transitions without a psychological or medical assessment.
In Taiwan, a trans woman took her ID card battle to court and won in 2021.
However, her victory has yet to translate into a policy change applicable to other trans people.
In China, transgender people can change their legal gender after undergoing surgery, though many limitations apply — including that the person must be over 18, unmarried and produce proof they have informed their families.
In Hong Kong, some fear Beijing’s crackdown on the opposition endangers further progress toward LGBTQ equality.
Many of the territory’s most prominent rights campaigners, and its only openly gay lawmaker, have been arrested, leaving few advocates in the halls of power.
In 2021, a Chinese University of Hong Kong survey found alarming levels of social marginalization among transgender respondents in the territory, with half reporting discrimination and 77 percent saying they had contemplated suicide.
Growing up, Tse attended a Christian girls’ school that required students to wear traditional cheongsam dresses, advised them to grow their hair long and described anything other than heterosexuality as “unnatural.”
His family “felt that my gender non-conformance is a disease.”
While studying at Britain’s University of Warwick, Tse was able to explore his identity.
When he returned to Hong Kong in 2017, he began experiencing routine problems because his ID card identified him as female.
“I’m outed every time I show my identity card,” he said.
At a gym, he was prevented from using the changing rooms, while a gender-segregated hostel turned him away.
“Clearly I should be in the space for men, but they were afraid of something happening, but actually nothing would happen,” he said.
“When [my ID] causes so many day-to-day problems and unequal treatment, I can’t live a normal life in Hong Kong like everyone else,” he added.
In 2017, Tse went to court to demand his gender be stated on his ID card.
For nearly six years, he attended hearings and staged rallies while judges, lawyers and newspapers dissected the most intimate details of his life and biology.
“I was mentally prepared to fight to the end, but I never expected it to take so long,” he said. “It cost me time, effort, money, the best years of my youth.”
His struggle inspired him to launch a non-governmental organization in 2020 to campaign for trans rights in Hong Kong.
Tse has vowed to continue building public awareness and fighting social stigma.
Everyone needs to know “we are normal people,” he said.
“We are your friends and colleagues. We just want to live, work and get married in Hong Kong,” he said.
VENEZUELAN ACTION: Marco Rubio said that previous US interdiction efforts have not stemmed the flow of illicit drugs into the US and that ‘blowing them up’ would US President Donald Trump on Wednesday justified a lethal military strike that his administration said was carried out a day earlier against a Venezuelan gang as a necessary effort by the US to send a message to Latin American cartels. Asked why the military did not instead interdict the vessel and capture those on board, Trump said that the operation would cause drug smugglers to think twice about trying to move drugs into the US. “There was massive amounts of drugs coming into our country to kill a lot of people and everybody fully understands that,” Trump said while hosting Polish President
Japan yesterday heralded the coming-of-age of Japanese Prince Hisahito with an elaborate ceremony at the Imperial Palace, where a succession crisis is brewing. The nephew of Japanese Emperor Naruhito, Hisahito received a black silk-and-lacquer crown at the ceremony, which marks the beginning of his royal adult life. “Thank you very much for bestowing the crown today at the coming-of-age ceremony,” Hisahito said. “I will fulfill my duties, being aware of my responsibilities as an adult member of the imperial family.” Although the emperor has a daughter — Princess Aiko — the 23-year-old has been sidelined by the royal family’s male-only
A French couple kept Louise, a playful black panther, in an apartment in northern France, triggering panic when she was spotted roaming nearby rooftops. The pair were were handed suspended jail sentences on Thursday for illegally keeping a wild animal, despite protesting that they saw Louise as their baby. The ruling follows a September 2019 incident when the months-old feline was seen roaming a rooftop in Armentieres after slipping out of the couple’s window. Authorities captured the panther by sedating her with anesthetic darts after she entered a home. No injuries were reported during the animal’s time on the loose. The court in the
Another tanker carrying liquefied natural gas from Russia’s sanctioned Arctic LNG (liquefied natural gas) 2 project has docked in a Chinese port, ship-tracking data showed, days after Russian President Vladimir Putin met Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) in Beijing. The London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG) tracking data indicated the Russian Voskhod LNG tanker was anchored at an LNG terminal in the port of Tieshan in Guangxi, China. The Russian flagged tanker, with a cargo of 150,000 cubic meters of LNG, was loaded up at the Arctic LNG 2 facility in Gydan in northern Siberia on July 19, LSEG data showed.