A gay couple who say they were removed from a pub after kissing should have left earlier after being warned, a former LVA boss has claimed.
James Bull and Jonathan Williams said they were thrown out of the John Snow on Broadwick Street in London’s Soho.
Daniel Griffiths, ex-president of the Federation of Licensed Victuallers Associations, said the pair should have gone “where the matter is accepted”.
Mr Williams, 26, said they were kissing but it “wasn’t anything indecent”.
Mr Bull, 23, said a man claiming to be the pub’s landlord first objected to their kissing shortly after 2145 BST on Wednesday, but they had been asked to leave an hour later after a “quick peck on the lips”.
The John Snow pub and Samuel Smith’s brewery, which owns the central London venue, have not commented on the incident.
“We make the house rules and we stand by those house rules”
Dennis Griffiths Ex-president of the Federation of LVAs
Mr Griffiths, owner of the Miners Rest in Barnsley, said every pub landlord was free to make in-house rules which “brings respect to the rest of the clientele”.
He said: “From a personal point of view, whether they were gay, whether they were lesbians or whether they were heterosexuals, I would still have thrown them out.
“It’s very, very hard times and we have got to keep as many people in the pub [as possible]. We make the house rules and we stand by those house rules. If he doesn’t like the house rules, don’t use the pub.”
He added: “When he was asked at quarter to 10 to leave or to stop doing it, if he intended to carry on he should have left them premises, in an orderly fashion, and gone to premises where the matter is accepted and stayed there.”
Mr Williams said: “We had been kissing but my hands and James’s hands were above the table so I don’t think it’s really a problem.
“Should I be stopped from kissing my partner in public just because I am not in a supposedly gay area? That is just utterly wrong, surely. We shouldn’t ghettoize people.
“If they want us out then there’s a better way of doing it and a polite way of doing it and a way that doesn’t make us feel like we have just been kicked out purely for being gay.”
The Metropolitan Police is investigating the incident.
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