My Life Is Too Dark To See the Light | Seite 67

IV. Conclusions and Recommendations In China, transgender people do not necessarily face outright legal penalties, but the absence of non-discrimination laws and lack of enforcement of overarching policies on non-discriminatory access to healthcare and HIV related services, means they are left without effective protection. Transgender people face varying degrees of discrimination in their daily lives, including at school, in the workplace, in housing and in obtaining medical treatment. Transgender sex workers are further oppressed by the police and, due to social and other factors are forced to engage in high risk activities that put them at increased risk of HIV and STD infection. China lacks a legal and policy framework “The community of female to address these issues, within a context presenting sex workers is of an ultra-conservative philosophy of “not very complex and includes encouraging, not discouraging and not MSM, transgender people promoting.”256 This attitude is preventing any and transsexuals. Their progress on safeguarding the interests of vulnerabilities to HIV and China’s minorities. In a recent resolution passed their varied health needs by the UN Human Rights Council regarding n