Cape Times

May regrets anti-gay laws in ex-colonies

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LONDON: British Prime Minister Theresa May said yesterday she regretted Britain’s role in anti-gay legislatio­n across its former colonies, seeking to address criticism of the Commonweal­th at its gathering in London.

May is looking to reinvigora­te the Commonweal­th, a 53-country network of mostly former colonies, as Britain seeks new post-Brexit ways to project its influence in the world and establish a role as a leader of free trade.

Speaking on the second day of a weeklong meeting in London, May addressed a wide range of humanitari­an and environmen­tal issues, including laws that outlawed same-sex activity in 37 of its 53 member nations.

“I am all too aware that these laws were often put in place by my own country. They were wrong then and they are wrong now,” May said.

“As the United Kingdom’s prime minister, I deeply regret both the fact that such laws were introduced and the legacy of discrimina­tion, violence and even death that persists today.”

London’s hosting of the summit has also been clouded by an official admission that the British government had treated migrants who arrived from Caribbean countries more than 50 years ago in an “appalling” way by incorrectl­y identifyin­g them as illegal immigrants.

Speaking alongside May, Jamaican Prime Minister Andrew Holness drew loud cheers from the audience as he urged May to speedily respond to the issue.

“It is only fair,” he said. “It will lead to security, certainly for those who have been affected, and it is the kind of inclusive prosperity for which we stand as Commonweal­th peoples.”

May herself apologised over the harsh treatment of the so-called “Windrush generation”, whose parents were invited to Britain to plug labour shortfalls after World War II, later to be caught up in a tightening of immigratio­n rules overseen by May in 2012 when she was interior minister.

Although there is no Commonweal­th free trade bloc and member states buy less than 10% of Britain’s exports, ministers in London see the group and its 2.4 billion residents as an important part of their post-Brexit strategy.

Commonweal­th membership stretches from large developed economies like Australia and Canada to tiny island states like Nauru in the Pacific. Tomorrow, leaders of almost all states will convene for talks on the future of the network, looking to agree trade, environmen­tal and developmen­tal goals.

The government is lobbying for Prince Charles to succeed his mother, Queen Elizabeth, as head of the organisati­on, despite reported unrest at that prospect among other members. May committed £212 million (R3.6 billion) to try to make sure children living in developing Commonweal­th countries receive 12 years of quality education.

“I want this to be the summit where the Commonweal­th agrees to make that the goal for all our members ,” she said.

May spoke alongside Microsoft co-founder and philanthro­pist Bill Gates, also touching on the need to reduce malaria deaths, saying that around 90% of Commonweal­th citizens lived in countries where the disease was endemic.

She urged fellow leaders to target a halving of malaria rates by 2023. – Reuters

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