Bangladesh TV hires country’s 1st transgender news anchor

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DHAKA, Bangladesh (AP) — A Bangladeshi satellite television station has hired the country’s first
transgender news anchor, saying it hopes the appointment will help change society.
Tashnuva Anan Shishir, who previously worked as a rights activist and actress, debuted on Dhaka-based
Boishakhi TV on Monday, International Women’s Day. She read a three-minute news bulletin, and after
finishing cried as her colleagues applauded and cheered.
"I was very nervous, I was feeling so much emotional, but I had in my mind that I must overcome this
ordeal, this final test," Shishir, 29, said in an interview Tuesday.
Born Kamal Hossain Shishir, she said she found in her early teens that she was stuck in a man’s body and
behaved like a woman. She said family members, relatives and neighbors started teasing her and she was
bullied and sexually exploited.
She started feeling that it was impossible to continue living and attempted suicide, she said.
The worst thing that happened was that her father stopped talking to her, saying she was the reason that
her family was losing face, Shishir said.
"I left home," she said.
She moved from her family’s house in a southern coastal district to live a solitary life in the capital,
where she underwent hormone therapy, worked for charities and acted with a local theater group. In
January, she began studying public health at a Dhaka university, which she is continuing alongside her
job at the TV station.
Bangladesh officially has more than 10,000 transgender people, but activists say the actual number is
much higher in the nation of more than 160 million people. The LGBT community faces social isolation,
sexual abuse and other forms of harassment. Finding employment is very difficult, and many live by
begging or selling sex.
Since 2013, the government of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has allowed transgender people to identify
themselves as a separate gender. They were given voting rights in 2018.
Some changes are already visible.
In November, a charity group opened Bangladesh’s first Islamic school for the transgender community.
Boishakhi TV said it wanted to be part of the changes and has hired a second transgender person in its
drama department.
"Our prime minister has taken many steps for the transgender people. Encouraged by such steps, we
have appointed two transgender people, We want the attitude of society to change through these
appointments," said Tipu Alam Milon, the station’s deputy managing director.

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