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Intersex Hongkonger wages one-person campaign for third gender recognition

Diagnosed male but found to have female organs, LGBTI advocate argues city’s intersex individuals would suffer less if the census recognised them

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LGBTI advocate Small Luk in Tsim Sha Tsui in October. Photo: Jonathan Wong

Hongkongers should be given an option to identify themselves as neither male nor female but “intersex” in the next citywide census, according to an activist who has pledged to launch a campaign for the third category.

Small Luk, born neither fully male nor female, argued that establishing a database on people who are intersex is crucial to recognising the existence of a highly marginalised group, encouraging the government and other organisations to develop policies to offer individuals adequate help.

Watch: ‘There must be hundreds of intersex people in Hong Kong’

At birth, Luk was diagnosed as genetically male based on the vestiges of male genitals and was forced to go through years of painful operations to correct the anatomy as he matured. That included constructing a urethra so that he did not need to urinate like a girl.

But it was only revealed three decades later that Luk, now 51, actually had an undeveloped uterus and vagina.

The finding prompted the registered social worker to remove the male genitalia and live as a woman thereafter.

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