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Apology for Stonewall Inn raid in 1969 delivered by New York City police

Click to play video: 'How the Stonewall riots fuelled fight for LGBTQ rights'
How the Stonewall riots fuelled fight for LGBTQ rights
On June 28, 1969, a police raid on a queer-friendly tavern, and damning reports that followed the arrests, resulted in three straight nights of protests, which grew into a global gay rights movement. Nick Logan explores how the Stonewall Riots changed the lives of generations of LGBTQ people and what work is left to be done – May 12, 2019

The New York Police Department on Thursday apologized for the first time for the raid on the Stonewall Inn gay bar 50 years ago and anti-gay laws of the time that gave rise to the modern LGBT rights movement, describing them as discriminatory and oppressive.

Gay rights advocates welcomed the apology, which they had sought from the NYPD for years.

WATCH: July 29, 2016 — Legacy of New York’s Stonewall riots on the LGBTQ movement

Click to play video: 'Legacy of New York’s Stonewall riots on the LGBTQ movement'
Legacy of New York’s Stonewall riots on the LGBTQ movement

Police raided the Stonewall, a Greenwich Village tavern, in the early morning hours of June 28, 1969. At the time, homosexuality was criminalized and most gay bars, including the Stonewall, were operated by organized crime.

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Patrons of the bar fought back that night and several days thereafter, leading to unprecedented demonstrations for the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people.

Activists memorialized the first anniversary of the Stonewall rebellion with what they called Christopher Street Liberation Day, starting an annual gay pride tradition that is now celebrated around the world.

READ MORE: Pride month — honouring the LGBTQ2 community’s progress and recognizing the work still to be done

The NYPD had resisted previous calls to apologize, but Commissioner James O’Neill chose Thursday to tell a gathering of gay rights advocates that this month’s World Pride events in New York for the 50th anniversary of Stonewall marked the right moment.

“What happened should not have happened,” O’Neill said. “The actions taken by the NYPD were wrong, plain and simple. The actions and the laws were discriminatory and oppressive, and for that, I apologize.”

WATCH: How the Stonewall riots fuelled the fight for LGBTQ rights 

Click to play video: 'How the Stonewall riots fuelled fight for LGBTQ rights'
How the Stonewall riots fuelled fight for LGBTQ rights

Organizers expect some 4 million people to visit New York later this month for World Pride. New York’s parade will be held on June 30.

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James Fallarino, spokesman for the group NYC Pride, said he welcomed O’Neill’s apologies.

“He represents the institution, and the institution and their violence against our community is one of the reasons why Pride exists,” he said. “It’s really important that the institution take responsibility for what happened.”

Former Commissioner William Bratton refused to apologize three years ago while acknowledging the raid was a “terrible experience.”

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WATCH: June 4 — Pride month: Honouring the LGBTQ2 community’s progress and recognizing the work still to be done

Click to play video: 'Pride month: Honouring the LGBTQ2 community’s progress and recognizing the work still to be done'
Pride month: Honouring the LGBTQ2 community’s progress and recognizing the work still to be done

“An apology, I don’t think so. I don’t think that’s necessary,” Bratton said. “The apology is all that’s occurred since then.”

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Seymour Pine, the retired deputy police inspector who led the raid, apologized in 2004 before a New York Historical Society event, the New York Times reported in Pine’s 2010 obituary.

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