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The Weekly Round-Up: no-fault divorce, Russia’s suspension and support for trans rights

In the news: 

Russia has been suspended from the Human Rights Council following a UN General Assembly resolution adopted on Thursday.  93 nations voted in favour of Russia’s suspension, 58 abstained and 24 voted against.  The resolution was adopted in a meeting of a special emergency session on the war in Ukraine.  Before the vote, Ukranian ambassador Sergiy Kyslytsya alleged that “thousands of peaceful residents [of Ukraine] have been killed, tortured, raped, abducted and robbed by the Russian Army”.  Following Russia’s suspension, Russian Deputy Permanent Representative Kuzmin announced that Russia had decided to leave the Council before the end of its term and that the Council was monopolised by states that “for many years have directly been involved in blatant and massive violations of human rights”.  Earlier last week, Twitter limited content from over 300 official Russian government accounts, including that of President Putin.  

On Wednesday the Divorce, Dissolution and Separation Act (2020) came into force, introducing no-fault divorce to domestic law.  Couples no longer need rely on adultery, unreasonable behaviour or years of separation as legal reasons for divorce and can instead separate by mutual agreement and avoid “unnecessary finger-pointing”.  The Act also removes the possibility of disputing a decision to divorce and introduces a minimum 20-week period from the start of proceedings to the granting of a conditional order of divorce. 

In other news: 

Following the government’s announcement that it will ban conversion therapy for sexual orientation, but not for gender identity, more than 100 organisations have pulled out of what was to be the first-ever international LGBT+ conference. The UK was set to host to this first-of-its-kind conference, called “Safe to Be Me”. Following the boycott by so many organisations however, the government has cancelled the event.  Several LGBT+ organisations signed an open letter, organised by Stonewall, saying they could not support the conference unless the government extended the ban on conversion therapy to cover attempts to convert transgender people.  On Tuesday the government’s first LGBT+ business champion resigned over the exclusion of trans conversion therapy from the ban. 

Data from this year’s gender pay gap reporting mechanism revealed that women in the UK are still paid on average 90p for every £1 earned by men.  Some well-known employers with particularly damaging reports include EasyJet, where women earned on average just 36p for every £1 earned by men, and HSBC Bank, whose male employees earned on average twice the amount of their female counterparts. 

In the courts: 

On the UKHRB: 

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