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Benedict Cumberbatch appeals for pardon for gay men convicted of 'indecency'
BENEDICT CUMBERBATCH and Stephen Fry have lent their names to a campaign asking the British government to pardon men prosecuted for being gay.
Cumberbatch was nominated for an Oscar for his performance as WWII codebreaker Alan Turing in The Imitation Game – Turing was convicted of ‘gross indecency’ for his homosexuality in 1952.
He took his own life in 1954, and was pardoned by British Prime Minister David Cameron in 2013. The ‘gross indecency’ laws were appealed in 2003.
Now, alongside Stephen Fry, Cumberbatch has signed an open letter appealing to the British government to pardon the other 49,000 gay men prosecuted for their sexuality in the country.
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The letter, printed in The Guardian, reads:
“We call upon Her Majesty’s Government to begin a discussion about the possibility of a pardoning of all the men, alive or deceased, who like Alan Turing, were convicted under the UK’s ‘gross indecency law’ and under other discriminatory anti-gay legislation,” it concludes.
A petition has been set up to gather support for the campaign – at the time of writing, it has gained over 64,225 signatures. You can find it here.
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Benedict Cumberbatch has apologised for using an ‘inappropriate’ racial term>
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Alan Turing benedict cumberbatch Homosexuality LGBT Issues Pardon Stephen Fry