X. v. United Kingdom

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X. v. the United Kingdom was a 1978 case before the European Court of Human Rights, challenging the Sexual Offences Act 1967 in the United Kingdom. The case addressed privacy protections and age of consent laws for homosexuals (case no. No. 7215/75, Dec. 12.10.1978)

Contents

[edit] Background

In 1974, a 26-year-old male, anonymously identified as 'X', was arrested in the United Kingdom and charged under the The Sexual Offences Act 1967 with two offences of buggery committed with two 18-year-old males. X was sentenced two and a half years of imprisonment on the first count and six months on the second count. There was evidence shown that X had virtually made a prisoner of one of the men he had relationship with.

[edit] Application to the European Court

The applicant in the case, X, contended that his arrest and imprisonment was a violation of Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights, which guarantees the right to respect for private life, and that homosexual relations between consenting adults should not be criminal offences.

X also appealed that The Sexual Offences Act 1967, which provided that sexual relations with a male under the age of 21 constituted a crime, was also in violation of Article 14, which prohibits discrimination. X's claim was based on the fact that the Act treated homosexual relations differently from heterosexual relationships, and that it treated male homosexual acts differently from female ones.

[edit] Ruling of the Court

The Court ruled unanimously that prosecution and imprisonment of X was not an interference with his right to privacy, because there was an element of force involved in one of the relationships. Therefore, no violation of Article 8 of the ECHR had taken place.

On the issue of the Act's age of consent being fixed at 21, the Court ruled eight votes to four that the age of consent laws were not in violation of the human rights convention, because protection of the rights of others was a legitimate aim, and therefore justified. No violation of either Article 8 or Article 14 had taken place.

On the issue of discrimination of homosexuals but not heterosexuals in the Act's age of consent provisions, the Court ruled nine votes to two with one abstention that social protection was a "objective and reasonable justification" for the criminal sanctions, and that no violation of either Aritcle 8 or Article 14 had taken place.

On the issue of the Act's difference in its treatment of male and female homosexual acts, the Court ruled eleven votes with one abstention that, citing German studies which describe "a specific social danger in the case of masculine homosexuality," and that male homosexuals as having "a clear tendency to proselytise adolescents," the Act's aims were justified, and no violation of either Article 8 or Article 14 had taken place.

[edit] See also