How this M’sian activist got on the BBC’s 100 Women of 2019 list
Malaysian transgender activist Nisha Ayub has been named on BBC’s 100 women of 2019, an annual list which highlights influential and inspiring women from around the world.
Nisha, the only Malaysian named on the list this year, is being highlighted for her work as an advocate for the rights of transgender people in Malaysia.
The list also mentioned a number of Nisha’s efforts as a transgender rights advocate, including SEED – Malaysia’s first-ever trans-led organisation, of which Nisha is a co-founder, and T-Home, a home created by Nisha for older transwomen who have no family support and are homeless.
Nisha Ayub’s efforts as a transgender and human rights activist don’t stop there.
Besides SEED and T-Home, Nisha also co-founded Justice For Sisters, a grassroots campaign which highlights issues surrounding violence and persecution against transgender people, sex workers, HIV sufferers and other marginalised groups.
Although the Federal Court reversed the ruling in 2015, in 2014 the Court of Appeals upheld Justice For Sisters’ legal challenge of a state Sharia law, ruling it to be discriminatory and unconstitutional.
These three organisations give people access to counselling, job training, health services, legal support and social welfare.
BBC’s list isn’t the first time Nisha has been acknowledged for her work.Â
In 2015, Nisha Ayub was honoured by Human Rights Watch for “challenging the discriminatory laws that prevent transgender people in Malaysia from living free of violence, fear, and oppressionâ€.
In 2016, she became the first transgender woman to be named as one of the US State Department’s International Women of Courage, which recognises women who are fighting for rights and equality.
Following her award for courage from the American government, the US city San Diego named April 5 as “Nisha Ayub Dayâ€
Last year, Leena Wong, a Malaysian marine ecologist from Universiti Putra Malaysia (UPM) discovered a new genus of sea slugs in Melaka and named one of it’s species Sacoproteus nishae (S. nishae), after Nisha.
Find out more about Nisha and her struggle as a transgender woman in Malaysia on her TED Talk.
Besides Nisha, BBC’s list also featured Swedish climate activist, Greta Thunberg, US scientist Katie Bouman who’s algorithm resulted in the first-ever image of a black hole.
Also on the list are Australian footballer, Tayla Harris, who made headlines after a photo of her kicking a ball during a match attracted misogynistic comments, Chinese MMA athlete Huang Wensi who won the Asia Female Continental Super Flyweight Championship gold belt in 2018 and Yumi Ishikawa, founder of the #KuToo movement in Japan.
BBC 100 Woman was launched in 2013 to highlight the achievements of women as BBC’s response to the fatal 2012 Delhi gang rape.
The series has highlighted Malaysian women in the past, namely Selangor Syariah High Court judge Nenney Shushaidah Shamsuddin last year who was appointed as one of Malaysia’s first two female Syariah High Court judges.
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