In 2000, the ban on homosexuality was lifted in Britain
The British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak today apologized on behalf of the government for the “appalling” treatment of veteran community members LGBT+ that they suffered sexual abuse, violence, bullying and harassment during their service in the armed forces before the ban on homosexuality was lifted in 2000.
Britain lifted this ban only after the European Court of Human Rights rejected the argument that the ban was necessary to protect morale and fighting strength in the ranks of the British military, with the Court ruling that the policy violated human rights.
Before this decision, many homosexuals in his ranks British Army they tried to hide their sexuality as they risked being caught by the armed forces.
An independent report began last year, examining testimonies from LGBTI+ veterans who served between 1967 and 2000. The report was released today.
In a packed House of Commons Prime Minister Sunak said the ban was one “horrible failure of the British state”.
“As today’s report makes clear, during this time many suffered the most horrific forms of sexual abuse and violence, homophobic bullying, while bravely serving this country,” the British prime minister said.
“Today, on behalf of the British state, I apologize,” he said.
The report said a public call for evidence drew more than 1,120 responses, including about 300 from veterans who were fired because of their sexual orientation.
British Defense Secretary Ben Wallace said the report shed light on “a shameful and unacceptable historical chapter in the history of the Armed Forces us”.
Speaking in Parliament, Mr Wallace said the report made 49 recommendations to the government, including strengthened health care provisions for LGBTI+ veterans and “appropriate financial compensation” for those veterans.
The government has accepted the vast majority of these recommendations in principle and will provide a comprehensive response after Parliament’s summer recess, the British minister said.
Homosexuality was decriminalized in 1967 in England and Wales and throughout the United Kingdom in the early 1980s.
In his conclusions, the author of that report, Lord Etherton, asked the head of government to apologise.
In early 2021, the Ministry of Defense announced that servicemen who were dismissed from the military because of their sexual orientation or gender identity would be able to recover the medals they were stripped of.
People from the LGBTI+ community had indeed been discharged and lost their medals after demobilization.
This change came after a legal battle by Falklands War veteran Joe Usalis, who in 2020 succeeded in having his medal returned to him after he was forced to leave the Royal Navy because of his sexual orientation.
The 70-year-old veteran from Southampton, a former radio operator who also served in the Middle East and Northern Ireland during his 18-year tour of duty, had been stripped of his long service and good conduct medal after he was court-martialed in 1993 for his bisexuality.
Source :Skai
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