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“We received the permission from the higher-ups recently. Accordingly, she has been conveyed the same,” Beed superintendent of police G Sreedhar told PTI.
The constable Lalita Salve, who now prefers to be called Lalit, had met Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis in March in this regard and was awaiting the state government’s permission to undergo the surgery.
She had also sent an application to the state Director General of Police (DGP), requesting permission to undergo the surgery.
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Salve had earlier approached the state police department to allow her leave to undergo the sex-change surgery.
The department had then turned down her plea as the eligibility criteria for men and women constables are different, including height and weight.
In November last year, she had moved the Bombay High Court seeking a direction to the DGP to grant her leave to undergo the surgery. She had sought leave for a month to undergo the sex reassignment surgery, but the request was refused by Beed police authorities, following which she approached the High Court.
However, the high court had directed her to approach the Maharashtra Administrative Tribunal since it was a service matter.
“I sought permission for the sex-change surgery, leave for the procedure and expressed my desire to be in the service as a male police constable after the surgery,” she had said.
She had also consulted doctors at the state-run J J hospital in Mumbai for the sex reassignment surgery.
Salve, born in June 1988, noticed changes in her body about four years ago and underwent medical tests, which confirmed the presence of Y chromosome in her body, according to her petition filed in the high court.
While men have X and Y sex chromosomes, women have two X chromosomes.