@ssooooo3: يميي جربوهاا ❤️حنزله مليون مره لين ينفك الحظر😂حطوو كومنتات😔🤎#اكل#اكلات_ديانا#فود #اكسبلور

ديانا/صباح 💛
ديانا/صباح 💛
Open In TikTok:
Region: SA
Tuesday 04 July 2023 09:52:59 GMT
3350719
129847
1702
9419

Music

Download

Comments

x.__.32
رَوان 🦋. :
الكابسا الحامرا السعوديا😭
2023-07-04 10:32:09
6066
hh_9lb
خالد :
طيب ليه تتكلمي كذا بالبداية
2023-07-04 10:18:22
2309
ill.r43
𝒮𝒶𝓇𝒶𝒽👑 :
الكابسا الحامرا السعوديا😭😭😭
2023-08-23 17:25:47
1385
2livxn
M :
الكابسا الحامرا السوعودياا
2023-07-04 13:15:04
1703
mri_46
مريم :
الكابسا الحمرا السعوديا😭😭
2023-07-04 13:51:59
708
i7._s2
Хусейн :
بالعافيه لكن انتي قلتي رصاص ولا انا غلطان؟
2023-07-04 10:35:11
201
To see more videos from user @ssooooo3, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

Japan’s Supreme Court ruled that a government policy requiring transgender citizens to be sterilized before legally changing genders was unconstitutional. Under a 2004 law, transgender people could only change their gender marker on government documents if they were diagnosed with gender dysphoria, unmarried, at least 18 years old, and not the parent of underage children, as well as if they had genital organs resembling the opposite sex and no reproductive glands. The lengthy list of requirements forced transgender people in Japan to undergo surgeries, including sterilization. Human Rights Watch (HRW) called the law 'abusive and retrograde.' The unanimous Supreme Court decision was made in a case brought by a trans woman. She wanted to change her gender without surgery, and her lawyer argued that she became unable to reproduce after years of hormone therapy she underwent in order to do so. The court ruled requiring sterilization was 'in violation' of the constitution. Reproductive rights are 'considered to be fundamental human rights' under the constitution, the judgment read in part. 'The fact that they must unwillingly undergo removal of their reproductive capacity in order to match their self-identified sex with their legal sex is a cruel choice,' it said. The historic decision is being praised by the LGBTQIA+ community. 'This judgment is a major step toward upholding the rights to health, privacy, and bodily autonomy of trans people in Japan,' read a statement from HRW. 'It will also resonate regionally and globally as governments increasingly recognize that the process for legal recognition of trans people needs to be separate from any medical interventions.' However, the ruling only pertains to the sterilization requirement. The court declined to rule on whether forcing trans people to have genital organs resembling the opposite sex was unconstitutional, sending that element of the case back to a lower court for deliberation. #japan #transgender #policy #international #lgbtq
Japan’s Supreme Court ruled that a government policy requiring transgender citizens to be sterilized before legally changing genders was unconstitutional. Under a 2004 law, transgender people could only change their gender marker on government documents if they were diagnosed with gender dysphoria, unmarried, at least 18 years old, and not the parent of underage children, as well as if they had genital organs resembling the opposite sex and no reproductive glands. The lengthy list of requirements forced transgender people in Japan to undergo surgeries, including sterilization. Human Rights Watch (HRW) called the law 'abusive and retrograde.' The unanimous Supreme Court decision was made in a case brought by a trans woman. She wanted to change her gender without surgery, and her lawyer argued that she became unable to reproduce after years of hormone therapy she underwent in order to do so. The court ruled requiring sterilization was 'in violation' of the constitution. Reproductive rights are 'considered to be fundamental human rights' under the constitution, the judgment read in part. 'The fact that they must unwillingly undergo removal of their reproductive capacity in order to match their self-identified sex with their legal sex is a cruel choice,' it said. The historic decision is being praised by the LGBTQIA+ community. 'This judgment is a major step toward upholding the rights to health, privacy, and bodily autonomy of trans people in Japan,' read a statement from HRW. 'It will also resonate regionally and globally as governments increasingly recognize that the process for legal recognition of trans people needs to be separate from any medical interventions.' However, the ruling only pertains to the sterilization requirement. The court declined to rule on whether forcing trans people to have genital organs resembling the opposite sex was unconstitutional, sending that element of the case back to a lower court for deliberation. #japan #transgender #policy #international #lgbtq

About