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19 Jul 2011

UN CEDAW to hear about discrimination against lesbian, bisexual women in Singapore

A 3-member team from Sayoni, a queer women's group in Singapore, is in New York to present a report to the United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) for the first time.

The UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) is slated to review the situation of women in Singapore on 22 July alongside seven other countries this month. CEDAW is the body of independent experts that monitors implementation of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women.

Left to right: Jean Chong, Vanessa Ho and Kelly Then at the UN on 18 July. Photo: Facebook

Sayoni is one of two women's groups in Singapore – the other being the stalwart Association of Women and Action (AWARE) – to submit their reports and make oral statements to the UN CEDAW Committee. It is the first time that the concerns of lesbian, bisexual and transgender (LBT) women in Singapore are represented by a queer women's group during this process.

Singapore is expected to respond to questions during the review afterwhich the Committee will make its Concluding Observations, identifying areas of concern and making recommendations for progress.

Singapore has ratified only two of nine core international human-rights treaties, one of which being CEDAW and the other being the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC).

Although Sayoni declined to make public its report prior to the review, it said in a press statement that the report will "highlight prevalent and systematic discrimination against women based on sexual orientation and gender identity across social, cultural, political and economic spheres of Singapore."

The statement also highlighted the state's response submitted in a document ahead of the review when asked to comment on what measures are in place to address discrimination against women based on sexual orientation and gender identity: "The principle of equality of all persons before the law is enshrined in the Constitution of the Republic of Singapore, regardless of gender, sexual orientation and gender identity. All persons in Singapore are entitled to the equal protection of the law, and have equal access to basic resources such as education, housing and healthcare.

"... Singapore's employment legislation provides recourse for employees who feel they have been unfairly dismissed, including on the grounds of their sexual orientation and gender identity and they have recourse to appeal to the Minister for Manpower for reinstatement to their former employment."

The Constitution of Singapore however does not contain any specific reference to sexual orientation or gender identity.

Jean Chong, co-founder of Sayoni and delegate at the CEDAW meeting, told Fridae: "While we appreciate the State’s efforts to improve gender equality in Singapore, their responses to the Committee's questions have consistently revealed an ignorance of the discrimination experienced by queer women in Singapore at every stage of life. Furthermore, policies have been implemented and legislation enacted that institutionalise the discrimination."

Prominent blogger and gay activist Alex Au however made no bones about what he thought of the state's response: "As we all know, the situation for lesbians and transwomen fall far short of equality in Singapore, yet before the United Nations, when called upon to explain itself, the government blithely asserts that our constitution says what it does not say."

"You could call it chutzpah. Or you could call it cowardice, preferring to say what it thinks the international community wants to hear rather than own up to its own failings." Au wrote in his blog, republished here on Fridae.

Singapore

Reader's Comments

1. 2011-07-19 20:51  
somehow I feel that lesbians are less discriminated as compared to gays. I know for a fact that most ppl have no issues with seeing two females walk hand in hand on the streets but two guys doing the same would get frowned upon in most Asian communities! >.
2. 2011-07-19 23:19  
I think we're talking about institutional and systematic discrimination here, not holding hands on the streets which anyone can do if you don't mind a few looks from passersby.
3. 2011-07-19 23:31  
seanadt IS soo right! and SOO HANDSOME TOO!
4. 2011-07-20 00:14  
@ seanadit: You mentioning of two guys 'getting frowned upon if they hold hands' is a tad puzzling...cause that's actually a pretty common
sight in many Asian countries...so much so that some Westerners actually mistook this phenomenon for 'gay paradise' lol...when we all know ..it's NOT. Far from it, in fact.

As for CEDAW, I congratulate them for their bravery and hope their good work ...gets heard & doesn't go to waste.
5. 2011-07-20 01:16  
@1
same poison. a lot of the crap that afflict gay men come from the same stubborn interpretations of gender norms which penalize women too. there's no need to jostle over who has got it worse. generally, in countries where gender equality is healthy, lgbt rights are not too far behind.
6. 2011-07-20 01:46  
Very well said pink socks!!
7. 2011-07-20 08:50  
@shabuya: thx ;)

@Bains: are we talking about Asia or just Thailand in particular? lolz XD
8. 2011-07-20 10:10  
@pink_socks
Yes, I think gender stereotypes penalise both men and women in poisonous ways. I agree that we should not jostle to see who has got it worse.

@seanadlt
Of course, as gay men, I do not doubt that our experience of discrimination is different from those of lesbian women.

However, your comparison of discrimination against lesbians and gay men is not only unhelpful, it's also based on short-sighted assumptions of what 'proper' discrimination looks like (in your example: it's more socially acceptable for women to hold hands in public, whereas this isn't as much the case for men, therefore lesbians are supposedly 'less discriminated' against than gay men).

You have not factored in a whole ton of other issues: the pay gap between genders (women are paid less than men around the world for doing the same work), and thus lesbian couples are on aggregate financially LESS well off than gay male couples; lesbianism is often seen as a 'fad' for straight guys to watch; many women in really conservative countries are prevented from pursuing their desires at all (whether for men, let alone for women); sexual violence against women who are perceived to be lesbian is also very high.

These are only some of the issues, of course, but if we are to grow as a global community, we can not pit ourselves against one another.
9. 2011-07-20 15:12  
Good work and congretulates who worked hardly on this issues.
10. 2011-07-20 15:25  
Well done girls.
11. 2011-07-20 16:42  
Discrimination comes in many form. Men really gets it easier at the work place. A "single" man in a CEO position will be deemed as an eligible bachelor and generally more acceptable, definitely less name-callings. Whereas the single ladies in senior management position still get called names, either "old virgin" for those with long hair, or "bull dyke, power butch" for those with short hair, regardless of their sexual orientation.

Sexual harassement in the work place can be quite bad as well for ladies. If you are single and suspected of being a lesbian, you will be subjected to jokes like getting "straightened up" by male colleagues. You generally don't hear such remarks in company about single man.
12. 2011-07-23 00:41  
@ seanadit; cmon...are you sure you don't see this in other Asian cities? I've seen plenty- Manila, Taipei, Jakarta, even Muslim-majority KL...
Comment #13 was deleted by its author on 2011-07-23 00:50
14. 2011-07-23 00:50  
And #11 Tsukihime: You've hit the bull's eye...there's definitely a BIG difference in the way single men v.s single women are treated, both @ work AND in social circles!!! And how you look plays a huge part as well; to put it crudely, "ugly/fat" girls or whoever they deem to be in this unfortunate category, get sneered at, whilst the "pretty" ones get leered at. So it's like case of damned if you're fine, damned if you're plain...as long as you are single & female.
15. 2011-08-01 23:04  
jakarta is far far away to be a home for gay. beside bali?
but nah, even in the US is only a few cities that accept the gay marriage.

asia is still far far far away from being not discriminated.

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