Why in the News?
Transgender Protection (Amendment) Bill, 2026 was introduced in Lok Sabha in March 2026. The Bill seeks to amend the Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Act, 2019. The Act provides for rights of transgender persons and their welfare. The Amendment Bill proposes major changes to India’s transgender rights framework, drawing criticism for moving away from the rights-based approach recognised by the Supreme Court in NALSA judgement (2014) and partially reflected in the 2019 Act. The controversy is sharp because the proposed law is seen as replacing self-identification with medical and bureaucratic control, while also narrowing the definition of who qualifies for protection.
What does the Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Act, 2019 currently recognise?
- Assigned Gender at Birth: The 2019 Act defines a transgender person as one whose gender does not match the gender assigned at birth.
- Recognised Categories: The law includes trans men, trans women, persons with intersex variations, genderqueer persons, and persons with socio-cultural identities such as kinnar, hijra, aravani, and jogta.
- Broad Coverage: The definition extends protection across both gender identity and socio-cultural community-based identities.
- Policy Basis: The law emerged in the backdrop of the Supreme Court’s recognition of gender identity as a matter of dignity, autonomy, and constitutional protection.
How did the NALSA judgment shape transgender rights in India?
The 2014 NALSA v. Union of India judgment revolutionized transgender rights in India by legally recognizing “third gender” identities, affirming self-identified gender without medical intervention, and extending fundamental rights protections.
- Self-Identification: The Supreme Court in NALSA (2014) upheld the fundamental right of transgender persons to identify as male, female, or third gender.
- Constitutional Protection: The judgment located transgender rights within equality, dignity, freedom, and non-discrimination under the Constitution.
- State Obligation: The Court directed governments to frame legal recognition measures and welfare safeguards for the transgender community.
- Recognition Principle: The judgment treated gender identity primarily as a matter of self-identification, not medical certification.
- Normative Shift: The decision marked a shift from welfare-based tokenism to a rights-based constitutional framework.
How did the Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Act, 2019 depart from the NALSA principle?
- Reduced Scope of Identity: The 2019 Act provided formal recognition but did not fully preserve the autonomy-based spirit of NALSA.
- Administrative Regulation: It introduced a process that made legal recognition dependent on official certification mechanisms.
- Partial Inclusion: The law included a wider set of identities, including socio-cultural communities, but remained contested for not fully adopting unconditional self-identification.
- Continuing Debate: The Act became a compromise framework rather than a complete implementation of the Supreme Court’s vision.
What definitional changes does the Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Amendment Bill, 2026 propose?
- Trans Person Definition: The 2019 Act defines a transgender person as a person whose gender does not match with the gender assigned at birth, and specifies certain persons who are included. The 2026 Bill removes this definition. It instead lists categories of persons to be included. The Bill also states that it will not include or will never have included persons with different sexual orientations and self-perceived sexual identities.
- The 2019 Act includes: (i) a person with socio-cultural identity such as kinner, hijra, aravani, or jogta (ii) a person with variations at birth in characteristics such as primary sexual characteristics, external genitalia, chromosomes, or hormones from the normative standard of male or female body. The 2026 Bill retains these categories.
- The 2026 Bill removes the following categories included in the 2019 Act:
- a trans-man or trans-woman, irrespective of whether such a person has undergone sex reassignment surgery, hormone therapy, laser therapy, or such other therapy
- Genderqueer.
- Narrowed Coverage: Introduces a separate category for individuals forcibly made to assume a transgender identity through practices such as mutilation, emasculation, castration, surgical procedures, or hormonal intervention.
- Exclusion of Self-Perception: The proposal reportedly removes the explanation in Section 2(4) of the 2019 Act that linked gender identity to self-perceived gender identity.
- Removal of NALSA Influence: The Bill deletes the 2019 provision that reflected the self-identification principle.
- Socio-Cultural Impact: Activists argue that excluding persons from recognised socio-cultural transgender communities would weaken protection for historically marginalised groups.
Why is the medical certification requirement controversial?
Under the 2019 Act, a transgender person may apply to the District Magistrate for issuing a certificate of identity as a transgender person. But the 2026 Bill includes the following:
- District Magistrate Certification: Under the Bill, a person can be recognised as transgender and receive an identity card only after the District Magistrate receives a certificate from the designated medical board. The board will be headed by a Chief Medical Officer or a Deputy Chief Medical Officer. The District Magistrate may take assistance from other medical experts.
- Medical Examination: The DM must satisfy himself that the board’s recommendation was issued after medical experts were relevantly consulted before granting a certificate of identity.
- Bureaucratic Control: The process shifts recognition from self-identification to medical verification plus administrative approval.
- Privacy Concerns: The model raises concerns regarding clinical gatekeeping, invasive examination, and possible disclosure of intimate personal information.
- Departure from Dignity Framework: The requirement reverses the principle that gender identity is fundamentally self-determined, not State-certified.
What new punishments does the Bill introduce?
- Existing Offences (2019 Act): Covers acts such as forced or bonded labour, denial of access to public places, forced eviction from residence, and physical, sexual, verbal, emotional, or financial abuse; punishable with imprisonment of 6 months to 2 years and fine.
- Enhanced Penal Framework: Retains earlier offences but supplements them with graded and stricter punishments for aggravated forms of coercion and violence.
- Kidnapping and Grievous Harm: Criminalises kidnapping or causing grievous hurt to force a person to assume a transgender identity; prescribes 10 years to life imprisonment with minimum ₹2 lakh fine for adults, and life imprisonment with minimum ₹5 lakh fine for children.
- Identity Compulsion for Exploitation: Penalises forcing a person to present as transgender and engage in begging, servitude, or bonded labour; punishment includes 5-10 years imprisonment with minimum ₹1 lakh fine for adults, and 10-14 years imprisonment with minimum ₹3 lakh fine for children.
- Forced Identity Violation: Introduces punishment for forcing a person to act against their sex/gender identity, recognising identity-based coercion as a punishable offence.
- Child Protection Dimension: Establishes higher penalties where victims are children, reflecting aggravated vulnerability and need for stricter deterrence.
- Expanded Penal Reach: Shifts from general protection to specific criminalisation of identity-based coercion, organised exploitation, and violence.
- Implementation Constraint: Raises concerns regarding over-reliance on punitive measures without parallel safeguards such as rehabilitation, livelihood support, and social integration mechanisms.
What are the criticisms of the 2026 Bill?
- Violation of Human Rights: Trans persons and activists argue that the amendment violates the right to individual self-determination of gender identity.
- Identity Concern: Activists state that gender identity cannot be reduced to medical approval or official certification.
- Continuity with Qualification: The Bill retains recognition of socio-cultural identities such as kinnar and hijra, but alters the definitional framework and recognition process, raising concerns about effective access to rights.
- Risk of Exploitation: Activists argue that for many trans persons, especially from marginalised backgrounds, dependence on coercive systems may itself be a form of exploitation.
- Conflict with Constitutional Morality: The Bill is seen as inconsistent with constitutional values of dignity, autonomy, equality, and privacy.
Does the Bill strengthen protection or dilute rights?
- Protective Intent: The penal clauses seek to address abuse, coercion, forced presentation, prostitution, bonded labour, and denial of access.
- Rights Dilution: The definitional narrowing and medical certification requirements are seen as diluting the rights framework.
- Institutional Contradiction: The Bill combines stronger punishment with weaker recognition rights.
- Policy Tension: It reflects a tension between protective criminal law and autonomy-based civil recognition.
- Net Effect: The criticism arises because the Bill may expand state control while narrowing community inclusion.
What constitutional and policy issues emerge from the debate?
- Equality: Differential treatment through medical certification may undermine substantive equality.
- Dignity: State scrutiny over gender identity affects dignity and personal autonomy.
- Privacy: Mandatory medical processes raise concerns regarding bodily privacy and informational privacy.
- Freedom of Expression: Gender expression forms part of personal liberty and identity.
- Welfare Access: Restrictive recognition can affect access to welfare entitlements, documentation, healthcare, and social justice measures.
- Administrative Justice: District-level certification may produce delays, discretion, exclusion, and uneven implementation.
Conclusion
The Bill reflects a shift from a rights-based framework of self-identification to a more regulated, certification-driven approach, raising concerns over autonomy and dignity. While it strengthens penal provisions against exploitation, its procedural constraints may limit effective access to rights. A balanced approach must align legal safeguards with constitutional principles of equality, privacy, and individual agency.
PYQ Relevance
[UPSC 2023] Explain the constitutional perspectives of Gender Justice with the help of relevant Constitutional Provisions and case laws.
Linkage: This question directly applies to transgender rights as gender justice extends beyond binary identities, supported by Articles 14, 15, 19, and 21 and cases like NALSA (2014) and Navtej Johar (2018). It helps analyse how the Bill’s shift from self-identification to medical certification may conflict with constitutional morality, dignity, and privacy jurisprudence.

