Pakistan’s first transgender lawyer goes from begging to fighting in court.
Pakistan Lawyer Nisha Rao maneuvers among the throng of black-coated attorneys clustered near Karachi’s city courts searching for her client.But Rao, 28, is not just another lawyer running for a meeting. As Pakistan’s first transgender lawyer, she has carved a path from the streets to the courtroom and her example is inspiring other transgender people in the conservative Islamic Republic.
“I am proud to have become Pakistan first transgender lawyer”, Rao told Reuters.
Life is hard for transgender persons in Pakistan, where the Supreme Court only allowed them to claim a third gender on their national identity cards in 2009. The parliament just passed a law in 2018 recognising transgender people as equal citizen and protecting them from discrimination and violence.
Treated as outcasts, many transgender persons are victims of sexual assault and resort to working as wedding dancers or begging to make a living.Rao also ended up begging on the streets after running away from her middle class home in the eastern city of Lahore when she was 18 with two other transgender persons.
Arriving in Karachi, Pakistan’s largest city, the elder transgender people she sought refuge with advised her to beg or become a sex worker to survive.
Rao stood at traffic lights begging from car to car but was determined to escape that path, eventually using her income to pay for law classes at night.
After several years, she earned a law degree, gaining her law license earlier this year and joining the Karachi Bar Association.
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