A Hong Kong activist behind a court battle for transgender rights has initiated a fresh legal challenge over being required to observe an array of allegedly unlawful requirements to continue using his preferred gender on identification documents.
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In a written judicial review application seen by the Post on Monday, Henry Edward Tse’s lawyers argued that the Immigration Department’s new regulations regarding the alteration of identity cards’ gender category remained legally flawed despite a landmark ruling that called for a policy change.
Tse’s lawyers also called for a statutory scheme to ensure the recognition of transgender individuals, arguing that the government’s failure to allow for the legal recognition of Tse’s acquired gender violated his rights to privacy and equality.
In February 2023, the 34-year-old activist and an anonymous applicant won a high-profile challenge at the Court of Final Appeal after they complained against being barred from changing the gender markers on their Hong Kong ID cards without undergoing full reassignment surgery.
The top court found that the commissioner of registration, a role filled by the director of immigration, had violated the two transgender men’s privacy rights under the Basic Law and the Hong Kong Bill of Rights.
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But the top appeal court’s five presiding judges stressed that the change of status on the identity card would not affect the legal status of the cardholder’s gender at birth.