Greece passes sex change law opposed by Orthodox Church

Greece passes sex change law opposed by Orthodox Church

by Joseph Anthony
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Protesters take part in a demonstration as the Greek Parliament debates bill allowing people to choose legal gender, in Athens

The Greek parliament passed a law on Tuesday to make it easier for people to change their legally recognised gender, a move that angered the Church but was welcomed as long-overdue by human rights groups.

The law will allow people to change their gender on official documents with a court ruling, and without requiring medical tests or sterilisation, as is the case now.

It has been condemned as โ€œimmoralโ€ by the Greek Orthodox Church and as a โ€œmonstrosityโ€ by right-wing politicians.

Until now, anyone needing to officially change their gender had to be diagnosed with a โ€œgender identity disorderโ€ and have their reproductive organs removed, a practice condemned by human rights campaigners.

โ€œAbsolutely no tradition, no perception of family calls for people to be sidelined or tossed aside into a social and institutional abyss,โ€ Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, who supported the law, told a heated discussion in parliament.

The law applies to anyone over the age of 15 and allows a person to change legal gender twice. Applicants must not be married and a final decision will be taken by a court.

The main opposition conservative New Democracy party voted against the bill saying it was a โ€œsloppyโ€ attempt to divert public attention from Greeceโ€™s financial woes.

โ€œYour only goal is to stay in power,โ€ said conservative lawmaker Simos Kedikoglou. โ€œYouโ€™ve found various methods of deception and this bill is the latest proof.โ€

Supporters rallied outside parliament during Mondayโ€™s debate, holding a banner reading: โ€œTransgender rights are human rightsโ€.

The Church had urged the government to withdraw the bill.

โ€œFor every human, gender is a sacred legacy. It is a precious thing for a woman to know about her feminine nature, and for a man to be aware of his male nature,โ€ Bishop Nicolaos of Mesogaia told Greek Skai TV.

The Church, he said, embraced โ€œpeople with difficulties.โ€

The bill passed by 171 votes in the 300-seat parliament, but it exposed fissures in the ruling coalition of Syriza and right-wing Independent Greeks party.

Most Independent Greeks approved the bill in principle but voted against an article setting the minimum age at 15, arguing that was too young.

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