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INDIA | Mumbai launches India's first LGBT taxi service

The initiative aims at promoting the rights of members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community in India.

Mumbai's first LGBT taxi service hailed as step in
right direction
From begging at the traffic lights of Mumbai to now being trained as a driver for India's first cab service operated by members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community, Sanjeevani Chauhan's life has come a full circle.

"When you see a transgender or a gay person driving a cab in Mumbai, the other transgenders who are begging on the streets will definitely want to be a part of this change," said Ganesh Somwanshi, project director for Wings Rainbow, India's first cab service to employ LGBT drivers.

Wings Travel, along with Humsafar Trust, a Mumbai-based NGO that works to promote the rights of India's gay community, launched the pilot phase of the Wings Rainbow initiative by enrolling Chauhan and four others.

They hope to expand to at least 1,500 taxis by the end of this year.


"There are so many of us who are in the sex trade or begging on the streets," Chauhan, who has been working as a counselor for Humsafar for nearly three years, told Al Jazeera.

"Working as a cab driver will not only give us a job and security but also a different kind of respect and acceptance within the society."

According to government figures, there are 2.5 million gays in India.


 Witness - Powerless in India


Even though India legally recognises transgenders, the LGBT community is heavily marginalised, suffering from intolerance and few opportunities for social integration.

"It took us nearly two months to get everyone on board," said Somwanshi.

"We did our research and spoke to gays, lesbians and transgenders to find out if they were ready for a project like this.

"They had their apprehensions and weren't sure if they would get enough customers, if people would take them seriously and what if customers refuse to pay for the ride."


Wings Rainbow hopes to expand to at least 1,500 taxis by the end of the year.[Photo courtesy of Wings Travel]
In 2014, India's Supreme Court passed a landmark judgment recognising the third gender and granted them equal rights to education, jobs and driving licences.

However, India still functions under the British colonial-era that criminalises homosexuality as a punishable offence.

"After the NALSA judgment, constitutionally LGBTs were given all the rights, but we had to figure out how to implement this on a grassroots level," Pallav Patankar, director of programmes at Humsafar, told Al Jazeera.

Patankar explained recalled that, as a gay man in India, he completely understood the challenges and obstacles Wings Rainbow will face.

He has been working for almost 20 years advocating for the rights of the LGBT community and empowering them through vocational training, computer literacy classes and convincing corporations to invest in jobs for the LGBT.

"They have a right to work and live like everyone else," Patankar said, adding that "we need to build their capacity but also sensitize the general public towards accepting them in such roles".

Chauhan expects to make around $200 per month as a cab driver and is quite confident of getting customers easily when compared to other drivers.

"I am not sure about the men but many women in Mumbai will be more comfortable being driven by us instead of the male drivers because they would feel a lot more safer with us," Chauhan said.

It will take nearly a year until the taxis hit the Mumbai roads but we can see the realities slowly changing on the ground for the LGBTs in India.-Al Jazeera

Israel's Shimon Peres hospitalised with chest pains

Former Israeli President Shimon Peres
is in hospital after suffering chest pains,
10 days after he had a small heart attack.
Mr Peres, 92, underwent minor surgery last week for a constricted artery.


A spokeswoman said on Sunday he was readmitted to a Tel Aviv hospital "for observation and testing".


He was not due to undergo any invasive procedures, Haaretz reported. Mr Peres twice served as Israel's prime minister and was president from 2007 to 2014.


On Sunday, he was found by doctors to have an irregular heartbeat, his spokeswoman said.
Mr Peres won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1994 for his role negotiating the Oslo peace accords with the Palestinians a year earlier, a prize he shared with Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, who was later assassinated, and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat.


He was defeated in the 1996 election by the head of the opposition Likud, Benjamin Netanyahu.
Mr Peres has held almost every major political office since Israel was founded in 1948, and was the architect of Israel's secret nuclear programme in 1959.


Despite his age, Mr Peres has maintained an active public schedule, mostly through his non-governmental Peres Centre for Peace,

which promotes closer ties between Israel and the Palestinians.
-bbc news
 
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