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Greens Condemn Interior Ministry Plan to Log Prior Gender Data Under Self‑Determination Law

Critics warn that cross‑agency retention of earlier entries would trigger outings, weakening protections.

Die Teilnehmer der Berlin Pride Parade warten gespannt auf den Beginn der Veranstaltung.
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Overview

  • A Federal Interior Ministry draft would add annotations to civil records for people who change their name or gender, including the previous entry, the date of change, the responsible authority and a file number.
  • The draft foresees transmitting these data to other authorities and displaying them to registration offices, with a visible change notice at each authority contact while blocking isolated searches for prior entries.
  • The government argues the measure is needed for reliable identity matching, says it would not be retroactive and indicates affected people could not object to the processing once the regulation takes effect.
  • Green lawmaker Nyke Slawik calls the plan a de facto special register that exposes trans, intersex and nonbinary people, and she criticizes the SPD for backing the move as the Interior Ministry says coordination is still underway.
  • The push follows the case of convicted right‑wing extremist Marla‑Svenja Liebich, yet Greens note security and justice authorities identified her under current rules without difficulty.