
Issue regulations on sex selective surgeries on intersex infants, Kerala HC asks govt.
The Hindu
Kerala HC orders State to issue regs on sex-selective surgeries on intersex infants/children. Court directs govt to form multidisciplinary committee to decide if surgery is essential to save life. Grants right to choose gender to individual, not court, and says intervention is intrusion into privacy and affront to dignity/freedom.
The Kerala High Court has directed the State government to issue within three months an order regulating sex selective surgeries on intersex infants and children.
Justice V.G. Arun also ordered that until the regulation was put in place, sex selective surgery shall be permitted only based on the opinion of a State-level multidisciplinary committee that the surgery was essential to save the life of such child/infant.
The court passed the directives recently while disposing of a writ petition filed by the parents of a child born with ambiguous genitalia (congenital adrinal hyperplasia) seeking permission of the court to conduct a genital reconstructive surgery on the child.
The court directed the government to constitute a State-level multidisciplinary committee consisting of a paediatrician/ paediatric endocrinologist, paediatric surgeon and child psychiatrist/ child psychologist to decide whether the child was facing any life threatening situation by reason of the ambiguous genitalia. If so, permission could be granted for carrying out the surgery.
The court observed that grant of permission for conducting genital reconstructive surgery would impinge the rights guaranteed under Articles 14 (equality before the law) 19 (freedom of speech) and 21 (protection of life and liberty) of the Constitution and conduct of the surgery without consent would violate the child’s dignity and privacy.
Granting such permission may also result in severe emotional and psychological issues if, on attaining adolescence, the child developed orientation towards the gender, other than the one to which the child was converted through surgical intervention.
The court also pointed out that the definition of transgender in Section 2(k) of the Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Act took in persons with intersex variations also, thereby making the protections under the Act available to such persons. Section 4(2) of the Act guaranteed the right to have a self perceived gender identity. Thus it was beyond cavil that the right to choose gender was vested with the individual concerned and no one else, not even the court.

Under the NBS, newborns are screened for communication disorders before they are discharged from the hospital. For this, AIISH has collaborated with several hospitals to conduct screening which is performed to detect hearing impairment and other developmental disabilities that can affect speech and language development. The screening has been helping in early intervention for those identified with the disorders, as any delay in the identification poses risk and affects successful management of children with hearing loss, according to AIISH.