New Zealand passes law banning conversion therapy
Send a link to a friend
[February 15, 2022]
By Praveen Menon
WELLINGTON (Reuters) - New Zealand's
parliament on Tuesday near-unanimously passed a legislation that bans
practices intended to forcibly change a person's sexual orientation,
gender identity or gender expression, known as conversion therapy.
The bill, which was introduced by the government last year, passed with
112 votes in favour and eight votes opposed.
“This is a great day for New Zealand’s rainbow communities,” Minister of
Justice Kris Faafoi said.
“Conversion practices have no place in modern New Zealand."
The government has said practices such as conversion therapy do not
work, are widely discredited and cause harm.
The legislation also lays out what is not conversion practice and
protects the right to express opinion, belief, religious belief or
principle which is not intended to change or suppress a person’s sexual
orientation, gender identity or gender expression.
The government said it had received nearly 107,000 public submissions on
the bill, the highest number of public submissions ever received on any
legislation.
Under the legislation, it will be an offence to perform conversion
practices on a child or young person aged under 18, or on someone with
impaired decision-making capacity. Such offences would be subject to up
to three years imprisonment.
[to top of second column]
|
A pedestrian walks past the New Zealand parliament building known as
the Beehive in central Wellington, New Zealand, July 3, 2017.
REUTERS/David Gray/File Photo
It will also be an offence to perform conversion practices on anyone –
irrespective of age – where the practices have caused serious harm, and
offenders can be subject to up to five years imprisonment.
Laws against conversion therapy have been gaining momentum around the
world. Canada's parliament voted unanimously last year to ban LGBT
conversion therapy.
The United States does not have a federal ban on conversion therapy, but
several U.S. states, including California, Colorado, New York,
Washington and Utah, prohibit the practice to some degree.
Aimed at changing a person's sexual orientation or gender identity,
conversion therapy can include talk therapy, hypnosis, electric shocks
and fasting. In extreme cases, exorcism and "corrective rape" for
lesbians, have been documented.
Ending conversion therapy was one New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda
Ardern's campaign promises when she was elected for a second term last
year.
(Reporting by Praveen Menon; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|