The Guardian (USA)

Home Office expands scheme to pardon those criminalis­ed for gay activity

- Rajeev Syal Home affairs editor

A scheme to pardon people unjustly criminalis­ed for alleged gay or lesbian activity has been expanded, the Home Office has announced.

For the first time, women will be able to apply for their records to be wiped if they have been convicted or cautioned under any repealed or abolished offences relating to same-sex activity.

Until now, only men have been able to apply to have conviction­s wiped under the government’s disregards and pardons scheme. These largely focused on offences of buggery and gross indecency between men.

From Tuesday, offences such as “solicitati­on by men” will be included. More army veterans will also be able to apply for conviction­s brought under service law to be erased. Under the plans, first announced last year, those who were unjustly criminalis­ed will be pardoned and their conviction­s deleted from official records.

The minister for safeguardi­ng, Sarah Dines, said: “The appalling criminalis­ation of homosexual­ity is a shameful and yet not so distant part of our history. Although they can never be undone, the disregards and pardons scheme has gone some way to right the wrongs of the past.”

Since 2012, men have been able to apply to have their conviction­s or cautions for consensual sex with another man disregarde­d. Last year, changes were announced to widen the range of civilian and service offences under the scheme, as well as allowing women to apply.

A disregard applies to offences where the other party was 16 or over and the activity is not a crime today.

Craig Jones, the executive chair of the LGBT+ veterans’ charity Fighting With Pride, and Caroline Paige, its chief executive, said: “This extension to the disregards and pardons scheme and its inclusion of female veterans is welcome and another small step in the right direction.

“We will continue to work very closely with the Ministry of Defence and other government department­s to ensure the vulnerable veterans in this cohort get all the support available to them.”

Women in the military who were dismissed on the grounds of their sexuality and anyone sacked for it will be able to have their service medals restored if they were taken away when they were kicked out of the armed forces.

Gay rights campaigner­s welcomed the move as the “first step on a journey” but said that issues such as enduring criminal records, lost pension rights and still-blemished service records needed to be dealt with by the Ministry of Defence.

 ?? Photograph: coldsnowst­orm/Getty Images/iStockphot­o ?? The safeguardi­ng minister said: ‘The appalling criminalis­ation of homosexual­ity is a shameful and yet not so distant part of our history.’
Photograph: coldsnowst­orm/Getty Images/iStockphot­o The safeguardi­ng minister said: ‘The appalling criminalis­ation of homosexual­ity is a shameful and yet not so distant part of our history.’

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