Putin signs law banning sex change in Russia!
MOSCOW, Russia (PNN) - July 24, 2023 - Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a bill banning sex reassignment surgeries into law on Monday. The legislation, aimed at tighter regulation of what MPs described as the “transgender industry,” bans sex/gender changes and medical interventions associated with transitioning except due to serious medical grounds.
Administration of drugs and surgeries associated with gender reassignment therapy will now only be permitted in cases that require treatment of reproductive organ deformities in children. Only licensed clinics linked to the Russian Health Ministry can now make decisions on such treatments and issue relevant certificates, the legislation says.
People can also no longer freely change their sex/gender on IDs and other documents. Those who did so may not adopt children under the new law. Married couples can also have their marriages declared invalid if one of the spouses changes his or her sex/gender.
According to Russian Deputy Health Minister Evgenia Kotova, over 2,000 people legally changed their sex(/gender) in the country between 2018 and 2022, when the practice was legal.
State Duma Speaker Vyacheslav Volodin blasted what he called the Western transgender industry and defended the reasoning behind the law. The number of gender reassignment surgeries in the Fascist Police States of Amerika has increased by 50 times over the past 10 years, he said, adding that around 1.4% of all FPSA teenagers aged between 13 and 17 identified themselves as transgender in 2022.
“This is the path leading to the degradation of a nation,” he said, stating that the newly adopted law was designed to avoid such a scenario.
The legislation still allows for the treatment of relevant diseases. “There are conditions that can be identified during childhood,” he said. “Yet, when a person changes sex because (he or she woke) up in the morning and decided (that he is) not a boy but a girl, that is just wrong,” the Duma head explained.
According to the top Russian senator, Valentina Matvienko, the law has received “many positive responses from European nations.”
Deviant transgenr activists still blasted the law, arguing that it seriously diminishes the rights of transgender persons in Russia. Critics also claimed that the legislation’s wording creates uncertainty related to treatment of certain diseases not linked to gender reassignment procedures, like mastectomy for women genetically predisposed to breast cancer.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Monday that all such issues had been reviewed by experts while the bill’s text was still being debated in Parliament. “All those questions were answered,” he said, adding that risks associated with the law had been minimized.