‘Woman’ means birth from birth to women: UK Supreme Court Landmark Rules in case of equal rights

Unanimously in the judgment, five senior judges announced that under the Act, both “woman” and “sex” are mentioned. Organic womenSide with Scottish Gender-Critical Group for Women’s Scotland (FWS), which appealed for the case.
The ruling people came as a shock to those who believe legal Gender recognition For women, complete inclusion should be guaranteed under the security of law. However, the court clarified that those identified as transgender have still been preserved against discrimination under other provisions of the Act.
Edan O’Neel Casey, who represented FWS in the appeal, urged the court to take into account the facts of biological reality rather than “legal imaginations.”
LGBTQ+ activists have long argued that if the court ruled in favor of gender critic campaigners, Trans women will no longer be able to get benefits to many facilities including women’s shelters.
Following this decision, after years of legal quarrels between the Scottish government and FWS, the group believes that people born only as women should be legally preserved as “women”.
Detecting ‘women’
The AFP reported that the purpose of the debate was to explain the implication of the Equality Act 2010, which described the characteristics including sex, gender and described women as “women of any age”, said AFP.
The Scottish government believed that anyone who had infected for a woman and has obtained a gender recognition certificate could be defined as a woman under the Equality Act. On the other hand, FWS, assuming its ground, said that biological sex is irreversible at birth and holds more importance than their gender identity. Therefore, arguing that trans women should not have legal protection as women born women.
The group contacted the Supreme Court in November, launched a challenge against the 2018 Scottish Act, meaning to hire more women in public areas, however, it also included Trans women who had GRC.
The GRC or Gender Accreditation Certificate was introduced under the 2004 Gender Recognition Act, allowing people to change their gender, identify as a male or a woman.