The book Sexual Orientation, Gender Identity and Justice: A Comparative Law Casebook by the International Commission of Jurists is a fascinating read and a learning experience. Today I read the section on intersex conditions. Unlike the transgendered, who are born into one sex but feel they are, or should be, another sex, people who are intersex are born with an anatomy not typical of males or females. This results
from variations in chromosomes, hormones, gonads, or genitalia. For example,
someone who is intersex may have one ovary and one testis, or gonads that
contain both ovarian and testicular tissue. Chromosomal patterns that are XXY
or XO instead of XX or XY are also intersex conditions.
People do not consider those who are intersex with having a medical condition.
Instead they are often incorrectly labeled as being "hermaphrodites".
However, most who are intersex don't view their condition as part of their
identity or describe themselves as being so. They just feel they have a medical
condition.
Intersex people often face discrimination and stigma. One of the problems
facing intersex children is genital normalizing by the medical establishment
with parental support. Many medical professionals perform surgery to make these
children fit neatly into the standard categories of male and female. Their
argument is that gender ambiguity can be traumatic and frustrating for the
parents and the child and that the child could have problems adjusting to that
ambiguous gender identity.
But identity can start forming early. By the age of five, intersex children
usually have an idea of who they are. After the age of five, the urgency to
perform surgery diminishes. However, the child's personal development should
supersede the right of parents to make decisions on the child's gender and
sexual identity.
Even though there is lack of consensus in some countries, courts around the
world have ruled that intersex children have a right to be so until they reach the
age of majority - the age of adulthood when they can then make informed
decisions for themselves.
It can be detrimental to have surgery before these children are able to make
the decision themselves. One example is David Reimer, who was an infant boy who
tragically lost his penis from a circumcision gone wrong. His parents then had
his genitals surgically altered to fit the female gender. After which Reimer
was raised as a girl. Reimer later rejected his female assignment and lived as
a man in adulthood, even to the point of getting married to a woman. He even
underwent female-to-male sex reassignment surgery. Sadly, however, he committed
suicide in 2004.
Christiane Volling was another tragic case. Volling was raised as a male, but
she had a uterus, fallopian tubes, ovaries, but no testis. At the age of
eighteen, rather than have surgery done to further adapt her to her biological,
organic sex, doctors removed her intra-abdominal female sexual organs without
her consent. No male organs were found.
Courts have also ruled that sexual reassignment surgery may only be offered to
intersex children with their informed consent. That means the child must
understand and accept the invasiveness of the medical procedure and the risks
involved. Otherwise the child will have to wait until the age of majority to
make this important decision (Reason stands that if intersex children can
decide to live as such until they are legal adults, then homosexual or bisexual
children should also be allowed to live as a homosexual or bisexual person into
adulthood). Any attempts to change a child could otherwise affect its
psychological and emotional well-being. The right of a child to explore its
sexuality, freely develop its personality, and express its own views is
guaranteed by the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights. These
rights are important since growing children need to live and experience their
sex, their gender, and their sexual orientation so as to be able to decide what
feels best for them.
No one else should be allowed to assign or impose a gender or their preferred
orientation "ideals" on intersex children. In addition, if young
adults find that a homosexual or bisexual orientation is what comes naturally
to them, they should be allowed to live so freely. That right of
self-determination must also continue on throughout adulthood. The state cannot
just withdraw their right to privacy, dignity and protection because of
irrational feelings and perceptions which are often shrouded in a cloak called
morality. It is after-all a deeply personal journey that is no one else's
business other than of that particular individual.

Akinyi Margareta Ocholla lives in Kenya and works as the Executive Director of Minority Women in Action. She is also Representative of the Women's Secretariat for the International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Intersex Association.