Gays hit Pacmom over
transgender slur, reproductive health
By PROGAY
Philippines
May 21,
2011
GAY and transgender
rights activists cried foul at the remarks made by celebrity mom Ms.
Dionisia Pacquiao in her spat with Senator Miriam Santiago over the
controversial reproductive health bill.
Over the week, Ms.
Pacquiao was quoted as saying "Tingnan mo, mga bakla, kaiinom ng
pills, hindi na bagay inumin ng mga bakla kasi lalake sila. Ginagawa
sila ng Diyos na lalake. Umiinom talaga sila ng pills para magsilaki
ang dede. Bawal 'yan!" (Direct your attention to transgenders, God
made transgenders to be males and they don't look good. They keep on
taking contraceptive pills to enlarge their breasts and that is wrong
and prohibited!)
Goya Candelario,
spokesperson of the Progressive Organization of Gays (ProGay
Philippines), said that she and her fellow Filipino transgenders are
taking offense at the homophobia and transphobia that Pacquiao's
remarks can help cultivate.
"With all due respect,
we want Mommy Dionisia to know that we are deeply offended and scared
that her words can again revive the disease model of homosexuality and
transexuality in Philippine society," Candelario said.
The ProGay leader said
that while it is true many low-income transgenders resort to taking
over-the-counter female hormones in contraceptive pills in order to
enhance their femininity, the practice should not be considered
immoral, illegal or a state of mental disorder.
"Many of us have to
take some form of female hormones because our livelihoods in the
beauty and tourism industries depend on enhanced feminine features.
However, because of expensive hormones that only high-income
transgenders can afford, we urban and rural poor gays and transgenders
can only access the cheaper birth control pills," Candelario added.
ProGay is also
campaigning for the comprehensive reproductive health bill so that not
only women of reproductive age can get access to health care but also
the low-income Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) residents
of the Philippines. Gay and transgender health advocates like
Candelario are batting for the inclusion of health teachings among
gay, transgender and lesbian working class populations so that we can
better understand the effects of hormones and other reproductive
health technologies.
"That is why we are
pleading with Ms. Pacquiao to come out with a better view of
transgenders and gays. She should understand our situation in order to
see how much we can benefit from the approval of the RH Bill."
According to a survey
made by ProGay among transgender groups in the slums of Manila, many
trans girls take pills in their early teens on the advise of elder
transgenders in order to get an early start at the job market of
overseas entertainers. The group believes that harm-reduction
education campaigns should be extended to this vulnerable group so
that risks of contraceptive pill usage can be reduced.
The group has a health
advisory service that counsels transgenders about the health risks of
dosing on pills, and the risks include blood clots, obesity, liver
disease and cardiovascular diseases.
"We should work to
remove discrimination and homophobia in health care services for LGBTs,
because the World Health Organization has already declared in 1990
that homosexuality is not a mental illness. Therefore, we ask people
like Ms. Pacquiao to join us bakla, gays and transgenders in improving
our health awareness, and not with hurtful words," Candelario said.