Off the wire
U.S. Republicans watch presidential election more closely than Democrats: poll  • Xinhua China news advisory -- May 24  • (Fukushima Aftermath) Interview: Fukushima impact unprecedented for oceans -- U.S. expert  • China Hushen 300 index futures open lower Tuesday  • China treasury bond futures open mixed Tuesday  • Austrian president-elect acknowledges need for unity, cooperation  • Mexican authorities exhume bodies from mass grave  • Austria sees closest presidential election result in post-WWII era  • Antarctic waters at risk of major ecological shift due to climate change: Aust'n research  • Market exchange rates in China -- May 24  
You are here:   Home

Aust'n state of Victoria to formally apologize for past treatment of homosexuals

Xinhua, May 24, 2016 Adjust font size:

The Premier of Victoria, Daniel Andrews, will formally apologize to the state's gay population on Tuesday for past laws that criminalized homosexuality.

Andrews is expected to address the Victorian parliament in Melbourne on Tuesday, offering an official apology to the gay community.

Some citizens previously jailed for being gay will be in the chambers to witness the landmark event, which is believed to be a world first.

In a statement on Monday, the Premier described the old laws, which were repealed in 1981, as "unjust."

Prior to homosexuality's decriminalization, the maximum sentence for the charge was 15 years in prison.

Since September last year, the Victorian government has been taking applications from gays and lesbians trying to have past court convictions, made on the basis of their sexuality, stricken from the public record.

Anna Brown from Human Rights Law Centre, the independent group representing a number of the convicted gay men, said the apology meant their clients could move on with their lives.

"These men can feel freed of the shackles of their past," Brown told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) on Tuesday.

"But also they carry a deep stigma and shame having a criminal conviction."

Brown said the conviction records -- held by Victoria's department of public prosecutions, the police and the courts -- were still in paper form, making them very difficult to locate.

"Finding the records is proving to be one of the most challenging parts of the scheme," she said.

It's not the first time an Australian government has felt compelled to apologize for its treatment of a marginalized group.

In 2008, then-Prime Minister Kevin Rudd officially said sorry on behalf of the Federal government to indigenous Australians for the Stolen Generations -- when Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children were removed from their families between the 1890s and 1970s. Endit