Sall Grover lodges a complaint against Australia with the UNHRC

Women have been effectively erased from law in Australia

Founder of the Giggle app for females only, Sall Grover has lodged a complaint against Australia with the United Nations Human Rights Committee (UNHRC).

The complaint centres on the fact the Federal court erased sex-based protections in law for females by falsely stating that humans can change their biological sex. In Australia, lesbians are not allowed to advertise female-only meetings and women like myself are taken to court for stating the fact that men can’t be women.

“This is not a culture war: this is about the fundamental human rights of women and girls,” Grover said.

“Women fought for generations to have spaces free from male presence - whether in crisis shelters, prisons, sports, or social networks. That right has now been stripped away by an activist legal interpretation that compels women to accept men in female-only spaces and punishes them for objecting. That is not progress; that is oppression.”

“The Sex Discrimination Commissioner submitted arguments to the Federal Court that directly contradict Australia’s obligations under the Convention of the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW)”, Grover said.

“The court then adopted those arguments wholesale, effectively making it illegal for women to have female-only spaces. This is not just judicial overreach - it is a totalitarian rewriting of the law.”

Unelected bureaucrats have been steadily erasing women from law in Australia and the consequences are dire. Sall Grover and her legal team have called on the UNHRC to intervene before her appeal is heard in August 2025.  

Our politicians and judiciary are behaving like activists instead of protectors and promoters of reality and sex-based rights.