Daily Express

MI6 chief: I am sorry about our ban on gay spies

- By Michael Knowles Security Correspond­ent

THE head of MI6 apologised yesterday for a ban on gay spies that “blighted lives and shattered dreams”.

Richard Moore paid tribute to “the extraordin­ary resilience and loyalty to service and country of LGBT+ colleagues past and present”.

He dismissed the “misguided” view that gay or lesbian spies were more susceptibl­e to blackmail than heterosexu­als.

The ban on LGBT+ spies working within MI6 was only lifted in 1991, long after homosexual­ity was decriminal­ised in England in 1967.

Mr Moore, 57, said: “I apologise on behalf of MI6 for the way our LGBT+ colleagues and fellow citizens were treated and express my regret to those whose lives were affected.

“Being LGBT+ did not make these people a national security threat. Of course not.

“But the ban did mean that we, in the intelligen­ce services, deprived ourselves of some of the best talent Britain could offer. Ready to serve but denied that opportunit­y. Committed, talented, public-spirited people had their careers and lives blighted because it was argued that being LGBT+ was incompatib­le with being an intelligen­ce profession­al.

“Because of this policy, other loyal and patriotic people had their dreams of serving their country in MI6 shattered. This was wrong, unjust and discrimina­tory.”

It comes amid a campaign to recruit a wider range of spies including dual nationals and disabled people.

Mr Moore – known profession­ally as C – has put diversity at the front of his tenure at the helm of the Secret Intelligen­ce Service, as MI6 is also known. In a video posted on Twitter, he said: “MI6 is open to people from all background­s, races, ages, sexualitie­s and all ways of thinking.

“Diversity makes us more effective, inclusion makes us stronger.”

Mr Moore admitted that prejudice had lingered in MI6 stations long after the LGBT+ spies ban was lifted.

He added: “Some staff who chose to come out were treated badly for not having previously disclosed their sexuality during their security vetting.

“Others who joined in the period post-1991 were made to feel unwelcome.

“That treatment fuelled a reluctance to be their true selves in the workplace. This was also unacceptab­le.”

But Mr Moore, who ran secret agents in Afghanista­n when the Taliban were in power, paid tribute to staff past and present.

He said they “slowly turned the tide by educating their workmates and fighting for change”.

He added: “We still have more to do to become a fully inclusive employer.”

 ??  ?? Wrong and unjust... Richard Moore said that the ban meant ‘we deprived ourselves of some of the best talent’
Wrong and unjust... Richard Moore said that the ban meant ‘we deprived ourselves of some of the best talent’

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