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Chinese transsexual disqualified for beauty contest
Last updated at: (Beijing Time) Friday, February 27, 2004
Chen Lili, the Chinese transsexual who had hoped to participate in the Miss
Universe Contest was formally rejected by the Organizing Committee for the Miss
World Competition on Feb 26.
Chen Lili, a 24-year old transsexual from Sichuan Province, was shut out of the
Miss Universe contest by organizers, saying she is an artificial woman.
In a fax to the Sichuan organizing committee, the Miss Universe headquarters
says Chen is disqualified because she is a transsexual. It says there never has
been any such case in the 53-year history of the contest.
Lili was granted permission early this week to participate in the international
event by Miss Universe-China contest officials in New York.
"A sex-change woman registering for the Miss Universe contest is something that
has never happened before," Miss Universe selection committee chairman Zhang
Ruiling told reporters.
Zhang explained that the qualified contestants for Miss World should be
"unmarried healthy female between 18 to 27 years old". The female refers to
"natural female".
But Zhang Ruiling said, though the Organizing Committee rejected Chen's
application, it agreed to give Chen a chance to show on stage on March 6, the
commencement day of the competition in Sichuan, for the Miss World Competition
is a contest to convey message of love and beauty. Moreover, the Organizing
Committee will arrange a teacher helping Chen to prepare for her show before the
competition begins.
Cao Gang, a beauty contest expert in Shanghai, offered his support to Lili: "She
has been granted the status as a woman, and is protected and recognized by law.
There is no reason to kick her out."
"Another media circus. They just want to have fun," Netizens addressed the issue
a sheer farce, "Even Chen herself has deliberately staged the cooperation media
gimmick."
In order to reach the Miss Universe competition, to be held in Ecuador on June
1, Lili must first win a competition in the Sichuan Province, located in the
southwest part of China.
"I hope to clinch the crown," Lili said, after learning she would be allowed to
compete earlier this week.
A successful model, Lili made headlines earlier this month when she was allowed
to change her identification card, a move recognizing her status as a woman. "I
could not be happier now, as my female status has become protected by the law,"
she said, in a sina report.
Lili underwent transsexual surgery in November, and applied to have her status
legally changed in January.
Earlier this week when Lili was allowed to participate in the contest, a lesbian
and gay rights commission official applauded it.
"It's surprising that she was allowed for this competition," said Dusty Araujo,
asylum coordinator at the International Lesbian and Gay Human Rights Commission.
"The most egregious human rights violations around the world happen to
transgender people, so I'm surprised that officials are open to this
possibility."
Araujo believes other transsexuals in and outside China have paved the way for
Lili to be as out and accepted as she is. Araujo cited Jin Xin, an award-winning
Chinese choreographer and dancer who has used her success as a platform to speak
out about being transsexual, and Dana International, the transsexual
Israeli pop star who made worldwide news when she won the Eurovision Song
Contest in 1998.
"Dana was the first one to break into a public, international event," Araujo
told the Gay.com/PlanetOut.com Network. "She broke the barriers for others."
"Once the transgender community gets news of Chen Lili, we could see more and
more transgender people entering these competitions," Araujo said.
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