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On Wednesday, the Supreme Court ruled that the conditions of “women” and “sex” in the equality law indicate a biological woman and biological sex.
Britain’s Equality Head said that the ruling means that transit women cannot use individual female toilets, clothing changing rooms, or competition in women’s sports.
Sarah Savage, a transgender woman, CEO and co -founder of Trans Private BRIGOTON, said it was not long ago that transit rights were “strengthening”.
Read more: Members of Parliament are the banned party of the city’s event
“I went out on a fourth channel TV program entitled My Transsexual Summer in 2011, and was seen as a water gathering in the field of rights,” 43 -year -old from Brighton told PA News on Thursday.
“We thought we would never come back because people have now seen human beings.
“I felt that our rights were strengthening, and now you feel like me melted, and it melts because people in power do not stand on us.”
Miss Savage described the ruling as “very worrying”, adding that she benefited from reaching the woman’s shelter after she came out and is now concerned that the opportunity was transferred from others.
On Wednesday, one of the home abuse institutions said that the court’s ruling “will not change” the way it works because it is still “firmly committed to supporting all the survivors of home abuse, including transit women.”
The charity said that it provides a set of “specialized services that can be accessed for transit women, including our auxiliary line, our community support, and some residence -based services” that are “designed to provide safety, dignity and support designed to meet individual needs.”
Miss Savage added: “This makes me feel afraid of the future because my rights are literally taken in front of my eyes.
“What if you need to go to the hospital? Will I count with respect? What kind of wing will I put?
“Will I need to use the bathroom and then harass because it is terrifying, frankly.
We held a committee meeting last night. Everyone was terrifying.
“Transient people only want a quiet life, we just want to continue to do so. We don’t want all this drama, we just want respect.”
Jin Fei, director of the community group, whose name in the lower issue – has expressed concern about her possible future care.
“As old, I may need hospital care, I expect to be forced to insult to be in a male ward, and this will be annoying at the very least.”
“For young people, it is exclusion from society, and these are only legal consequences.
“I think this in time should be unjust, but perhaps not in the rest of my life.
“This will take years so that I do not have any confidence in the English legal or political system.
“The climate that belongs to Nushies was that people are interested in human rights, and I am afraid that we may have been scasting since then, and we are not very concerned with human rights now.”