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・ Operation Skyshield
・ Operation Slapshot
・ Operation Slapstick
・ Operation Sledgehammer
・ Operation Sledgehammer (2007)
・ Operation Slipper
・ Operation Smile
・ Operation Smile China Medical Mission
・ Operation Smokescreen
・ Operation Snake
・ Operation Snatch
・ Operation Snow Flurry
・ Operation Snow White
・ Operation Snowball
・ Operation Snowcap
Operation Soap
・ Operation Soberanía
・ Operation Socialist
・ Operation Solace
・ Operation Solare
・ Operation Solomon
・ Operation Solstice
・ Operation Sonnenblume
・ Operation Source
・ Operation Southeast Croatia
・ Operation Southern Cross
・ Operation Southern Focus
・ Operation Southern Move
・ Operation Southern Watch
・ Operation Sovereign Borders


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Operation Soap : ウィキペディア英語版
Operation Soap

Operation Soap was a raid by the Metropolitan Toronto Police against four gay bathhouses in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, which took place on February 5, 1981. More than three hundred men were arrested, the largest mass arrest in Canada since the 1970 October crisis, before the record was broken during the 2006 Stanley Cup Playoffs in Edmonton, Alberta.
The event marked a major turning point in the history of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community in Canada; the raids and their aftermath are today widely considered to be the Canadian equivalent of the 1969 Stonewall riots in New York City.〔("Pride history display flaunts the past" ), ''Xtra!'', June 23, 2005.〕 Mass protests and rallies were held denouncing the incident.〔Gordon, Rebecca. "Queers in Space: Communities, Public Places, Sites of Resistance." ''The Women's Review of Books'' 15.n6 (March 1998): 7(2).〕 These evolved into Toronto's current Pride Week, which is now one of the world's largest gay pride festivals and celebrated its 35th anniversary in 2015.
Several Toronto bathhouses had previously been raided, and other raids followed.〔 Most charges connected to the incident were eventually dropped or discharged, although some bathhouse owners were fined. Canada's "bawdy-house" law, under which the charges in this raid were laid, has never been repealed, but has only rarely been applied against gay establishments since the trials connected to the 1981 raids ended.〔
At the time it was widely believed that the raids were approved by Attorney General of Ontario Roy McMurtry and the provincial government. In a 2007 interview, however, McMurtry said that this was not the case: "The irony of the whole thing was that I had expressed my concern to the chief of police; that it really looked like we were dissolving into a police state. The whole thing looked terrible. Without a doubt, that was one of my most frustrating experiences." McMurtry subsequently served as Chief Justice of Ontario and wrote the 2003 decision of Ontario's Court of Appeal in favour of same-sex marriage.
==Timeline==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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