
-
New Asian Tour event 'like a major' for Filipino golfers
-
Warriors thump Lakers in NBA season opener
-
'Mixed performance': Heineken beer sales down
-
Top UN court to rule on Israel's Gaza aid obligations
-
State of emergency in Peru's capital after wave of violence
-
Europa League beckons as Dyche prepares for Forest bow
-
SGA leads Thunder past Rockets in season-opening thriller
-
Gold falls again as rally comes to halt, Asian markets drop
-
Pakistan's trans people struggle to get safe surgery
-
North Korea fires multiple ballistic missiles, first launch in months
-
'Music to my ears': Trump brushes off White House demolition critics
-
Genflow Biosciences PLC Announces Second European Patent Application
-
Oman Hosts the Oman Investment Forum 2025 in the United Kingdom
-
Colombia's president embraces war of words with Trump
-
Argentina's central bank intervenes to halt run on peso
-
Trump says doesn't want 'wasted' meeting with Putin
-
New JPMorgan skyscraper underlines Manhattan office comeback
-
PSG hit seven, Barcelona, Arsenal run riot as Champions League rains goals
-
Colombian court overturns ex-president Uribe's witness tampering conviction
-
WNBA players to receive 'big increase' in salaries: Silver
-
Dembele challenges PSG to 'keep it up' after Leverkusen thumping
-
Dembele scores on return as PSG hammer Leverkusen 7-2
-
Newcastle too good for 'little Magpie' Mourinho's Benfica
-
GM cuts EV production in Canada, cites Trump backpedal
-
Gyokeres ends goal drought in Arsenal thrashing of Atletico
-
Netflix shares sink as quarterly profit misses mark
-
Haaland scores again as Man City beat Villarreal
-
French ex-president Sarkozy enters prison after funding conviction
-
Louvre director faces grilling over $102 mn jewels heist
-
Trump and Putin's Budapest summit shelved
-
Liverpool disrupted by flight delay, Gravenberch out of Frankfurt trip
-
Djokovic pulls out of Paris Masters
-
OpenAI unveils search browser in challenge to Google
-
Lopez, Rashford inspire Barca rout of Olympiacos
-
Wolvaardt stars as South Africa crush Pakistan in rain-hit World Cup contest
-
Trump urged Ukraine to give up land in 'tense' talks: Kyiv source
-
Kids paid 'a huge price' for Covid measures: ex-UK PM Johnson
-
Louvre jewel heist valued at $102 mn: French prosecutor
-
Adidas hikes profit forecast as contains US tariff impact
-
Sundance film festival sets tributes to late co-founder Redford
-
Wife of Colombian killed in US strike says life taken unjustly
-
Dodging Trump's tariffs, Brazil's Embraer lands record orders
-
West Indies beat Bangladesh in super over after setting ODI spin record
-
GM shares soar on better tariff outlook and EV backpedal
-
Stocks rise on China-US hopes, gold and silver slump
-
What we know about the downfall of Prince Andrew
-
Colombia, US vow to improve anti-drug strategy amid Trump-Petro feud
-
Virginia Giuffre memoir goes on sale, piling pressure on Prince Andrew
-
Artificial insemination raises hopes for world's rarest big cat
-
Maresca says Chelsea's red-card run is teaching opportunity

Pakistan's trans people struggle to get safe surgery
In Pakistan, where gender affirmation surgery was recently legalised, Bunty is one of the few trans women who could afford to get it done safely.
Despite winning the right to medically transition in 2018, many transgender people in the Muslim-majority nation still turn to unqualified surgeons because of a lack of trained doctors, high costs and cultural taboos.
Bunty, who no longer uses her family name since her transition, said she went to the only doctor in the northeastern city of Lahore who performs breast augmentation surgery for trans women -- a qualified, experienced professional.
While the procedure was successful, she said it took place in an "underground" manner and cost twice the normal rate for a cisgender woman.
"I was kept at the hospital for only two hours and then I was forced to leave so that no one would find out," she told AFP.
"I was in extreme pain."
It was the latest ignominy for Bunty, who said she was shunned by her family over her gender identity, then sacked from the job that funded her hospital bills, pushing her into sex work.
She said the hospital did not want news of her procedure to spread among doctors and patients who might disapprove.
"Gender transitioning is still controversial. Doctors fear they will be judged," said Mudassir Mahboob, a doctor who carries out legal gender-affirmation surgeries.
Mahboob said he chose to work in the capital, Islamabad, to avoid causing controversy in his deeply conservative home province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
He has operated on patients who have asked him to repair damage done to them by unscrupulous backstreet "doctors".
One of them, "who got castrated by a so-called practitioner, came to me and asked me to fix what went wrong", he said.
- 'Have fear of God' -
Reem Sharif, a member of a communal household known as a "dera" for trans people, said there were only two doctors in Pakistan openly offering legal, safe gender affirmation procedures.
Public hospitals often turn away those who enquire about such services, citing religion, Sharif said.
"They would say: 'Have fear of God, how can you try to do this?'" she told AFP, surrounded by other trans women putting on make-up and fixing their hair.
"Gender transition is legal according to the law, but practically it is not, and (it) is not accepted in society."
No reliable data exists on the number of transgender people in Pakistan.
The country has long recognised a third sex, known as "khawaja sira", who for centuries have played a spiritual role in society, offering blessings at weddings and births.
The 2018 law aimed to strengthen political and social rights for transgender people, whose wider integration was being met with increasing violence.
Despite being lauded around the world, the law drew domestic backlash from right-wing religious groups, which spread disinformation that it would lead to same-sex marriage in a country where homosexuality is illegal.
The law remains in force but is subject to court challenges, including a review of whether it complies with Islamic law, which coexists with Pakistan's secular legal code.
Psychiatrist Sana Yasir said "the most visits and follow-ups I have had" came in the three years since those challenges began, as transgender clients grappled with the potential repercussions of any legal change.
Rights groups say trans people who are helped to transition report better quality of life, while those not given support are more likely to report mental health issues, including suicidal ideation.
According to Pakistan's religious and cultural norms, having surgery to change gender characteristics is "a sin", even if it aligns one's body and gender identity, said Mehleb Sheikh, an independent trans rights researcher and activist.
Gender affirmation surgery is available in some other Muslim countries, such as Egypt, where the procedure is legal but only with approval from doctors and religious officials. In practice, access remains extremely limited.
In Iran, gender affirmation care is legal and even subsidised by the government, but according to activists, transgender people face discrimination on a daily basis.
- Threats, violence, and pride -
Activists say Pakistan is seeing a rise in violence against trans people, although exact figures are not available due to severe underreporting.
The Gender Interactive Alliance in Pakistan says 56 people have been killed since 2022.
They include three trans women whose bullet-ridden bodies were found on a roadside in the megacity of Karachi last month.
"My brother threatened to kill me and demanded that either I be thrown out of the house, or he would hurt me, blaming me for ruining their honour and their reputation," said Zarun Ishaque, a 29-year-old transgender man in Islamabad.
Despite the hardship, he told AFP that "this happiness after my transition is the dearest (thing)".
"My inner self has come out, and I am very happy with my life like this."
Haroon -- a pseudonym to protect his identity -- said his transformation had allowed him to finally feel "very comfortable with myself".
He has managed to have breast removal and bottom surgery despite being shunned by family and some doctors.
"If you have the capability, if you've taken this step and made the decision, then you don't step back," he told AFP.
S.F.Warren--AMWN