News

Gay Indians Demand Apology

Thousands of gay activists in India will gather today to call on the British Government to apologise for introducing anti-sodomy laws that still make homosexuality illegal in India today.

Their call will be issued during the first gay pride march in Mumbai for three years and is part of a wider campaign to abolish Section 377 of the Indian penal code which outlaws "unnatural sexual offences" and theoretically punishes anal or oral sex with up to 10 years in prison.

In practice no one has been prosecuted under the law in the past two decades but it has been used by officials to counter the work of HIV activists in some Indian states.

Gay rights campaigners also argue that because Section 377 enshrines homophobia in India's legal systems it also legitimises the continued repression of gay men and women in wider Indian society.

A draft copy of the statement seen by The Independent accuses Britain of exporting homophobia during the 19th century when colonial administrators began enforcing Victorian laws and morals on their Indian subjects.

It reads: "We call on the British Government to apologise for the immense suffering that has resulted from their imposition of Section 377. And we call on the Indian government to abandon this abhorrent alien legacy of the Raj that should have left our shores when the British did."

Gay rights activists argue that Hindu, Buddhist and early Muslim cultures on the subcontinent had a long history of tolerance towards same-sex relationships.



Add your comment


That seems kind of ridiculous to me. It's not like Britain has forced India to continue with it's homophobic ways. If anything, the UK has set a fantastic example with gay rights.

POSTED BY CitizenGeek 18 Aug 2008

That seems kind of ridiculous to me. It's not like Britain has forced India to continue with it's homophobic ways. If anything, the UK has set a fantastic example with gay rights.

POSTED BY CitizenGeek 18 Aug 2008

Britain may have set a fantastic example in recent years with gay rights, but let's not forget that many of India's social problems are hangovers from the British occupation of that country. And like it or not, Britain did introduce the legislation outlawing sodomy into Indian statute books, where there was no such law before they were there.

POSTED BY Lindy 18 Aug 2008

You're absolutely right CG, they've had 50-odd years to change their laws, but given that whole sections of their society remain 'untouchable', it's probably surprising they didn't make the British sodomy laws harsher in the decades since independence.

POSTED BY Stephen Meyler 18 Aug 2008

That's true, Stephen - the social laws in India are completely corrupt and designed to keep the rich rich, the powerful powerful and the poor in their place. I can't imagine that in such a climate that liberal laws around homosexuality would flourish.

POSTED BY The Wizard 19 Aug 2008

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