Ed Miliband backs campaign to pardon gay sex offences

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Labour leader Ed Miliband has pledged support for a campaign to pardon men convicted of historic gay sex offences.

Relatives of gay codebreaker AlanĀ Turing delivered a petition to Downing Street last week calling for theĀ 49,000 men convicted under anti-gay laws to be pardoned.

Miliband told GT (Gay Times) that, if elected Prime Minister, he would make the matter a priority.

He said: ā€œI think itā€™s worth saying that we DO want to extend the principles being applied to Alan Turing and his family, to be able to say to others who were convicted of a criminal offence simply because of the person that they loved ā€“ whether they are alive or no longer alive ā€“ that we can get a pardon for them.

ā€œI think itā€™s a stain on our society, frankly. I think itā€™s right whatā€™s been done in relation to Alan Turing and his family, but there are also other families that will have had relatives who were convicted, as I say, simply because of the person they love. And I think itā€™s time we acted for them, too.

ā€œI think we owe it to the LGBT community to make this move.ā€

Proponents of a pardon want the measure applied on a case-by-case basis, using modern consent laws to evaluate whether people should be pardoned.

PeopleĀ with historic gay sex convictions who are still alive can already have them expunged under 2012ā€™s Protection of Freedoms Act ā€“ but records cannot be expunged posthumously.

The Queen granted a rare posthumous pardon in 2013 to Alan Turing, under the Royal Prerogative of Mercy.

The Liberal Democrats last weekĀ pledged support for theĀ campaign.