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'We can do better': NSW to become last state to apologise for criminalising homosexuality

The apology coincides with 40 years since homosexuality was decriminalised in NSW, and comes months after a landmark inquiry into possible gay hate crimes in the state between 1970 and 2010.

Chris Minns standing in front of trees and bushes.

NSW Premier Chris Minns acknowledged that while words can't remedy the discrimination those affected were subject to, he hoped the apology would bring "some semblance of closure". Source: AAP / Dan Himbrechts

The top line: NSW will formally apologise to those who were convicted under laws that criminalised homosexuality, making it the last Australian state to do so.

The bigger picture: Coinciding with 40 years since homosexuality was decriminalised in NSW, the apology will come months after a scathing report found gay hate bias was a likely factor in 25 of 32 suspected homicides between 1970 and 2010.

Last year's inquiry into suspected hate crimes made 12 recommendations about unsolved murder investigations, including calling for a review of practices, procedures and resources.
The key quote: "I hope that it brings some semblance of closure to those that were unfairly targeted by laws of the day that criminalised gay and lesbian people for being who they are" — NSW Premier Chris Minns.

What else to know: Former premier Neville Wran decriminalised homosexuality in NSW in 1984.
Victoria and South Australia formally apologised in 2016, while Tasmania, Western Australia and Queensland did in 2017 and the Northern Territory in 2018.

What happens now: The formal apology will be issued in parliament.


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2 min read
Published 11 May 2024 11:32am
Source: AAP



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