Convicted
soldier hails verdict as victory for transgender people, though it does not
compel US military to treat her as a woman
theguardian.com,
Associated Press in Leavenworth, Wednesday 23 April 2014
A Kansas judge granted a request Wednesday to formally change the name of the soldier convicted of leaking classified documents to WikiLeaks from Bradley Edward Manning to Chelsea Elizabeth Manning.
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| This undated photo shows Chelsea Manning in wig and make-up. Photograph: HO/AFP/Getty Images |
A Kansas judge granted a request Wednesday to formally change the name of the soldier convicted of leaking classified documents to WikiLeaks from Bradley Edward Manning to Chelsea Elizabeth Manning.
The former
intelligence analyst is serving a 35-year prison sentence for passing
classified US government information to the anti-secrecy website WikiLeaks.
Manning is serving the sentence at the army prison on Fort Leavenworth in
Kansas.
Leavenworth
county district judge David King said he'd allow the name change during a court
hearing that lasted about a minute. Manning didn't attend the hearing but
issued a statement saying it was "an exciting day".
"Hopefully
today's name change, while so meaningful to me personally, can also raise
awareness of the fact that we [transgender] people exist everywhere in America
today, and that we have must jump through hurdles every day just for being who
we are," Manning said.
The
decision clears the way for official changes to Manning's military records, but
it would not compel the military to treat Manning as a woman. That includes
transferring Manning to a prison with a woman's unit.
The only
impact of the district court ruling was changing Manning's name on military
records, but not his confinement status, army spokesman George Wright said.
"Likewise,
the US disciplinary barracks is a male-only facility and prisoners there are
referred to by the title 'inmate'," Wright said in a statement to the
Associated Press.
Manning,
who grew up in Oklahoma, filed the court petition as the first step toward
getting her army records changed.
Manning has
been diagnosed by at least two army behavioral health specialists with gender
dysphoria, or gender identity disorder.
Manning was
sentenced in August for six Espionage Act violations and 14 other offenses for
leaking more than 700,000 secret military and US State Department documents,
along with battlefield video, while working as an intelligence analyst in Iraq
in 2009 and 2010. An army general upheld the convictions last week, clearing
the way for appeals with the army court of criminal appeals.
There was
no opposition filed to the petition, though Manning included several newspaper
reports indicating the desire to live publicly as a woman last August, as well
as copy of an Oklahoma birth certificate.
She has
filed a grievance with the US disciplinary barracks commander at Fort
Leavenworth over the lack of a response to her request for comprehensive
treatment for her gender identity disorder, including specialized gender
counseling and hormone replacement therapy.
The
military has said it doesn't provide hormone replacement therapy. Gender
dysphoria generally disqualifies one for military service, but Manning can't be
discharged while serving the prison sentence.
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