Asia Catalyst Annual Report 2015 | Page 22

Advocacy, Research, & Policy Asia Catalyst understands the importance of enacting policy change at the highest levels. To that end we engage in strategic, independent, and collaborative evidencebased advocacy, aimed at ending discrimination and increasing human rights protections for all. In 2015, Asia Catalyst continued advocacy on increasing nondiscriminatory access to health services for transgender people in China, as well as embarking on a one year documentation and advocacy project to highlight the negative impact of police practices on sex workers’ vulnerability to HIV in China. CONTINUING THE CAMPAIGN In 2014, Asia Catalyst partnered with two Chinese community based organizations to document the living conditions of China’s transgender female sex workers. As a direct result of Asia Catalyst’s research and continued advocacy on transgender sex workers’ vulnerability to HIV, the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) China organized China’s firstever national consultation on trans* people and HIV in July 2015. This consultation addressed the current knowledge gap about transgender persons’ vulnerability to HIV in China, and built consensus on the importance of responding to transgender persons’ needs and improving HIV interventions for this population. To bolster community participation, Asia Catalyst facilitated a pre-meeting workshop that helped ten transgender leaders form recommendations and strategies ahead of the consultation. UNDP also invited Asia Catalyst to present findings and recommendations from its groundbreaking 2014 report: My Life is Too Dark to See the Light. This multi-stakeholder meeting included a diverse representation of transgender persons, government officials, and civil society leaders. This was particularly important as, in China, representatives of the transgender community rarely have the opportunity to engage with policy-makers and influence the policies directly affecting them. International collaboration led to an important closed-door meeting between the Head of India’s National AIDS Control Programme and Dr. Wu Zunyoun, the Head of China’s National Center for AIDS/STD Control and Prevention. At the end of meeting, community participants were invited to submit recommendations to the government, which included: more extensive work on data collection and evidence of HIV among the transgender population, especially among transgender sex workers as they are most vulnerable to HIV transmission; creation of more accessible government counseling and health care service programs; and engagement between community based organizations and the China CDC for technical and practical support on issues related to HIV. “ We don’t have data on trans people, but it doesn’t mean there is no epidemic in this group. With more knowledge on trans culture and life style, we will have more capacity to help this group and work together to respond to social health and HIV. ” -Dr. Wu Zunyou, Director of China’s National Center for AIDS/STD Control Asia Catalyst community partners define what advocacy means to them in a May 2015 workshop in Bangkok, Thailand. Asia Catalyst photo, 2015. 20 21 A transgender female sex worker activist stands in a doorway outside of a typical work venue for transgender sex workers in Beijing. Asia Catalyst photo.