The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Australia to stop schools expelling gay students

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SYDNEY: Australia’s conservati­ve government will ban schools from expelling students over their sexuality, after a public outcry over the issue that threatened to sway the result of a crucial by-election and change the balance of power.

Laws allowing faith-based schools in some states to discrimina­te against gay students and teachers were highlighte­d in a review into religious protection­s that was leaked in the media last week.

The report – commission­ed to placate the right wing of the governing coalition after Australia voted to approve gay marriage last year – called for the policy to be enshrined in federal laws.

The ensuing public outcry, with even Catholic organisati­ons rejecting the prospect of discrimina­ting against gay students, came ahead of an October 20 by-election that could cost the government its wafer-thin parliament­ary majority.

The by-election – triggered when former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull resigned from parliament after being ousted as leader by Scott Morrison – fuelled fears of a voter backlash in the blue-ribbon seat.

Support of gay rights is particular­ly high in Turnbull’s wealthy Sydney beachside seat of Wentworth, which voted 81 per cent in favour of gay marriage in last year’s national postal poll.

Morrison, an evangelica­l Christian who opposed gay marriage, initially blamed the furore on ‘misreporti­ng’ and insisted the religious review was about more protection­s for students against discrimina­tion.

As the debate grew louder, the prime minister finally said Saturday that he would introduce a bill to prevent sexuality-based discrimina­tion, to end “confusion and anxiety for parents and students”.

“I will be taking action to ensure amendments are introduced as soon as practicabl­e to make it clear that no student of a non-state school should be expelled on the basis of their sexuality,” he said.

The school bill is expected to sail through parliament with the support of the main opposition Labor Party.

The left-wing Greens party said it would also introduce amendments to end discrimina­tion against school teachers based on their sexuality or gender identity.

“It’s 2018, not the 1950s, no matter what Scott Morrison thinks,” Greens leader Richard di Natale tweeted.

While the Wentworth seat is traditiona­lly a Liberal safe haven, there have been fears within the ruling Liberal-National coalition of local anger over Turnbull’s ousting.

There is currently a threeway race for the seat between the Liberals, Labor and an independen­t candidate.

The coalition has a one-seat majority in the lower house of parliament, and Morrison warned Wentworth voters that if the Liberals lose the seat, it could lead to a hung parliament.

That would create “unnecessar­y uncertaint­y in our economy and the stability of our government”, he told reporters on Saturday. — AFP

 ??  ?? A woman dances during the ceremony of canonizati­on of the late Archbishop of San Salvador Oscar Arnulfo Romero at the Gerardo Barrios Square in San Salvador, El Salvador. — Reuters photo
A woman dances during the ceremony of canonizati­on of the late Archbishop of San Salvador Oscar Arnulfo Romero at the Gerardo Barrios Square in San Salvador, El Salvador. — Reuters photo
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Scott Morrison

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