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England fans with Transgender Pride flags in the stands after an open training session at Twickenham Stadium. Alamy Stock Photo

'We’re not freaks' – Transgender activists protest against ‘disgraceful’ rugby ban

Emily Hamilton, founding co-chair of LGBTQ+ supporters association ‘Quins Pride’, was among a group staging a peaceful protest at Twickenham.

A TRANS activist attending England’s open training session at Twickenham believes the decision to ban transgender women from playing female contact rugby has made life less safe for her community.

Emily Hamilton, founding co-chair of LGBTQ+ rugby supporters association ‘Quins Pride’, was among a flag-waving group of around 20 people staging a peaceful protest on Thursday.

They were part of a 1,000 crowd who watched the Red Roses being put through their paces as they step up preparations for this autumn’s World Cup in New Zealand.

The event was staged the day after the Irish Rugby Football Union announced it is to emulate the Rugby Football Union by revising its rules for transgender women competing at grassroots level.

Hamilton, who played 18 seasons as an amateur before transitioning, insists that rugby is no longer a “safe and inclusive place” after the governing bodies voted to follow the lead taken by World Rugby when it implemented a ban in the elite game.

“We were part of the rugby family — I’ve been in rugby for nearly 40 years — but now we’ve been told that we’re no longer part of that family,” Hamilton told the PA news agency.

“We are human beings but we are being used as a political football, being kicked about at all levels of life. We thought rugby is a safe and inclusive place, which it no longer is.

“We just want to be seen and to be visible and for people to understand that we’re not the monsters we’re portrayed as.

“We’re not freaks of nature and actually in many cases, we’re not that different to the women you see out there on the pitch training.

“It’s also about the social contagion. What’s happened in the last two weeks has opened the doors to the most horrific abuse — people telling me to kill myself, abusing me online — and just for standing up to say this is the wrong decision.

“The contagion spreads because people feel emboldened to be abusive and to repeat bigotry. That makes our lives less safe and less enjoyable.

“All of the fears I had when I transitioned are back again now because we’re being told we’re not welcome in the sport. We’re swimming against the tide but that won’t stop us swimming.”

The decision to limit women’s contact rugby to players whose sex was recorded as female at birth is rooted in concerns over safety and fairness, but Hamilton rejects these reasons.

“It’s absurd and disgraceful to ban trans women en masse having operated on a case-by-case basis,” Hamilton said. “To say that every trans woman is automatically unsafe can only be said by someone who has never watched a match of rugby in their life.

“Look out onto the pitch now — there are body shapes of all sizes, so to blanket ban trans women on that basis is absurd.

“If we are now saying that rugby is dangerous for people of differing sizes to play against each other, that’s not a trans issue, that’s a much broader issue.”

Among the players in action at Twickenham was Marlie Packer, the Saracens flanker who is determined to tap into the feel-good factor generated by England’s recent Euros success.

“What the football team did was amazing and the buzz around the country has been unbelievable, but like the Lionesses said it’s just the start,” Packer told the PA news agency. “We have a buzz around us after we won the Six Nations and winning the World Cup would be massive, bringing the nation together. Hopefully, we can do what the Lionesses did.”

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