Historical persecution Northern Ireland's homosexuality laws have historically reflected the English position, given the history of English dominance over
Ireland since the 12th century, culminating in official union under the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland in 1801. Following the
partition of Ireland, Northern Ireland remained a part of the
United Kingdom, with the remainder of Ireland forming the independent
Republic of Ireland. Homosexuality was a matter for the
ecclesiastical law of the
Roman Catholic Church until the reign of King
Henry VIII. During his rule, the act of
buggery was criminalised by the
Buggery Act 1533 as part of increasing the State's role in public life at the expense of the Catholic Church. This prohibited anal sex with "mankind or beast" anywhere in England and Wales on pain of death, but did not apply to Ireland until 1634. The death penalty was retained until 1861. In 1885, the
Labouchere Amendment introduced the offence of
gross indecency in the
Criminal Law Amendment Act 1885, which applied throughout England, Wales, Scotland and Ireland. This broadened the scope of the criminal law to outlaw any form of male homosexual activity. By contrast, adult lesbianism was never criminalised. The
Victorian era laws criminalising male homosexual acts throughout
Great Britain and
Ireland, the
Offences against the Person Act 1861 and
Criminal Law Amendment Act 1885, remained in effect well into the 20th century.
Campaigns for and against change In 1967, the
Parliament of the United Kingdom voted to pass the
Sexual Offences Act 1967 for the limited decriminalisation of homosexual acts, but this applied only to
England and Wales. Same-sex sexual activities were legalised in Scotland on the same basis as in the 1967 Act, by section 80 of the
Criminal Justice (Scotland) Act 1980, which came into force on 1 February 1981. The British Government's failure to extend the 1967 reforms to Northern Ireland led to the establishment of organisations such as the
Campaign for Homosexual Equality and the
Gay Liberation Front. During the 1970s, Northern Ireland was under
direct rule from
Westminster, so the organisations tried to bypass the Northern Ireland parties which were hostile to their cause and petition the
Secretary of State for Northern Ireland directly. Initially, this appeared fruitful, with the Secretary referring homosexual reform to the Standing Advisory Committee on Human Rights for Northern Ireland. In 1976, the Committee recommended extending the 1967 reforms to Northern Ireland but warned that public support for the change in Northern Ireland was limited. In 1978, the British Government published a draft
Order in Council to decriminalise homosexual conduct in Northern Ireland between men over 21 years of age, in line with the 1967 reforms in England and Wales. However, it failed without the support of any of the 12 Northern Ireland politicians in the Westminster Parliament and the open opposition expressed by the
Democratic Unionist Party representatives.
Gay men continued to face harassment from the
Royal Ulster Constabulary police force throughout the 1970s and 1980s, with the Northern Ireland Gay Rights Association (NIGRA) recording instances of harassment and continuing to lobby for decriminalisation. NIGRA members also faced arrests, forced medical examinations and house raids, ostensibly for other issues such as drug searches, but also had correspondence regarding the decriminalisation campaign confiscated by police. NIGRA were opposed by a vociferous
Save Ulster from Sodomy campaign led by
Ian Paisley, the
Free Presbyterian Church of Ulster and the
Democratic Unionist Party, both of which were established by him. Initially, Paisley's campaign succeeded, with the British Government announcing in 1979 that it would not proceed with changes to Northern Ireland's anti-homosexuality laws. Although the Government promised that the laws would not be enforced against gay men, police harassment and arrests continued on the pretence of other misdemeanours. The arrest of one activist, NIGRA secretary Jeffrey Dudgeon, proved instrumental in the ultimate success of the decriminalisation campaign.
European Court of Human Rights ruling Jeffrey Dudgeon was a shipping clerk in
Belfast, who was a gay activist and secretary of NIGRA. On 21 January 1976, he was arrested by the
Royal Ulster Constabulary drugs squad after they found marijuana and personal correspondence describing homosexual acts performed by him. He was interrogated for over four hours about his sex life and made to sign a statement about his sexual activities. The police forwarded the material to prosecutors to have Dudgeon charged with
gross indecency, but the Director of Prosecutions decided not to proceed on the grounds that it would not be in the public interest. Dudgeon was informed in February 1977 of the decision and his private papers, which had been annotated by the police, were returned to him. Both NIGRA and the Irish gay rights groups financially supported Dudgeon filing a complaint with the
European Commission of Human Rights against Northern Ireland's anti-homosexuality laws in 1975. Dudgeon alleged that the laws were invalid on two grounds. Firstly, he claimed that the laws and resulting police investigation interfered with his right to respect for private life in violation of
Article 8 of the
European Convention on Human Rights. Secondly, Dudgeon alleged that he had suffered discrimination on the grounds of sex, sexuality and residence in accordance with
Article 14 of the
European Convention on Human Rights. Despite having previously rejected similar earlier complaints as "manifestly inadmissible", the Commission declared the complaint to be admissible on 3 March 1978. On 13 March 1980, the Commission issued a report stating that "the legal prohibition of [homosexual] acts between male persons over 21 years of age breached the applicant's right to respect for his private life". It referred the case to the
European Court of Human Rights for judgment on 18 July 1980. On 22 October 1981, the European Court of Human Rights ruled by a 15–4 majority in
Dudgeon v United Kingdom that no member nation had the right to impose a total ban on homosexual activity. which came into force on 8 December 1982. Anti-LGBT provisions of the criminal law were removed completely throughout Northern Ireland and the United Kingdom in the
Sexual Offences Act 2003, with section 9 abolishing the discriminatory offences of
buggery and
gross indecency. Private gay sex between more than two people was legalised, but
cottaging remains illegal. To bring Northern Ireland in line with the rest of the
United Kingdom, the British Parliament passed the
Sexual Offences (Northern Ireland) Order 2008, reducing the age of consent to 16, despite the opposition of the Northern Ireland Assembly.
Pardons for historical convictions (2017) In November 2016, the
Northern Ireland Assembly passed a
Legislative Consent Motion to extend the operation of United Kingdom's
Policing and Crime Act 2017, including its
Alan Turing Law, to Northern Ireland. That law enables anyone convicted of anti-homosexuality offences to obtain a
pardon. The only opponent in the Assembly was
Traditional Unionist Voice's
Jim Allister, whose
private member's motion to remove historical pardons from the Legislative Consent Motion failed on a voice vote.
Prison gay sex loophole lawsuits In July 2021,
lawsuits were launched in the UK - due to all prisons in Northern Ireland still legally banning gay sex since 1982, as within a
loophole exemption. ==Recognition of same-sex relationships==