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‘Turing’s law’ passed in UK pardons thousands

A slate statue of codebreaker and computing genius Alan Turning at Bletchley Park in England.

A slate statue of codebreaker and computing genius Alan Turning at Bletchley Park in England. Photo: AAP/Keir David

Thousands of men convicted under now-abolished anti-homosexuality laws in Britain have been pardoned posthumously under a law enacted on Tuesday, and many more still alive can now apply to have their criminal convictions wiped out.

Announcing the new law, the Ministry of Justice said the pardons apply automatically to deceased men who were convicted for consensual same-sex relations before homosexuality was decriminalised several decades ago.

Men living with convictions can apply to the government to have their names cleared.

“This is a truly momentous day. We can never undo the hurt caused, but we have apologised and taken action to right these wrongs,” Justice Minister Sam Gyimah said.

Calls for a general pardon have noted the 1954 suicide of World War II codebreaking hero Alan Turing after his conviction for “gross indecency.”

Alan Turning Benedict Cumberbatch

Alan Turing’s (left) life was protrayed by Benedict Cumberbatch in the biopic The Imitation Game. Photo: Stuart C.Wilson/Getty

After he received a posthumous royal pardon in 2013, pressure for pardons intensified.

Turing, a computer science pioneer, helped crack Nazi Germany’s secret codes by creating the “Turing bombe,” a forerunner of modern computers. His work helped shorten World War II, and he was an innovator of artificial intelligence.

After the war, Turing was prosecuted for having sex with a man, stripped of his security clearance and forcibly treated with female hormones.

He died at age 41 after eating an apple laced with cyanide.

What is now known as ‘Turing’s law’ had been a longstanding government commitment, Gyimah said.

Alan Turing notebook

Enigma codebreaker Alan Turing’s notebook recently sold for $A1.66 million. Photo: Chris Radburn/PA

Activist Peter Tatchell, who had campaigned for 30 years for the pardons and an apology from the British government, welcomed the new law, but said it “has connotations of forgiveness for a wrong done.”

The law will “remedy the grave injustices suffered by many of the estimated 50,000 to 100,000 men who were convicted under discriminatory anti-gay laws between 1885 and 2003,” he said in a statement.

Tatchell noted some omissions in the legislation, including pardons for men convicted of soliciting and procuring same-sex partners under the sexual offenses acts of 1956 and 1967.

Nor did it pardon “those people, including some lesbians, convicted for same-sex kissing and cuddling” under a variety of laws.

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