Modinos v. Cyprus

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

LGBT and Queer studies series
Rainbow flag
LGBT Portal
Lesbian · Gay · Bisexual · Transgender · Homosexuality
LGBT history
Timeline · Gay Liberation · Social movements · AIDS timeline
Culture
Community · Pride · Coming out · Gay slang · Gay village · Queer theory · Religion · Symbols · Queer · Questioning
Law
Marriage · Civil union · Adoption · Sodomy law · Military service · Hate crime · Around the world
Anti-LGBT discrimination
Heterosexism · Homophobia · Lesbophobia · Biphobia · Transphobia
Categories
This box: view  talk  edit

Modinos v Cyprus (judgment of 25 March 1993) is a judgment of the European Court of Human Rights concerning Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights

[edit] Facts

Mr. Modinos, a gay rights activist, who was at the time involved in a sexual relationship with another male adult, claimed to suffer great stain, apprehension, and fear of prosecution by reason of the laws of Cyprus, which criminalized certain homosexual acts.

[edit] Judgment

(8 votes to one)

The existence of a prohibition continuously and directly affected the applicant’s private life, thus there was an interference with his right to respect for private life. As the Government limited their submissions to maintaining that there was no interference, and did not seek to argue that there existed a justification under Article 8(2) for the impugned legal provisions, the Court did not find that - in the light of the above mentioned fact and having regard to the its judgment in Dudgeon v. United Kingdom and Norris v. Ireland - a re-examination of the question was called for.

[edit] References

This case law article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.