Greek parliament approves civil union for same-sex couples |
Greece’s parliament on Wednesday approved a bill granting same-sex
couples the right to a civil union, becoming one of the last European
countries to give them legal recognition after years of opposition from
the influential Orthodox church.
A number of EU countries including Britain, France and Spain have
legalised gay marriage, but some southern and eastern European states
have made slower progress.
The new Greek law resolves property and inheritance issues, but makes no provision for the adoption of children.
“This is an important day for human rights,” Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras told the chamber.
Tsipras said the bill gives same-sex couples “equal rights in life
and death”, terminating a practice of “backwardness and shame” for
Greece.
Greece had been condemned for anti-gay discrimination by the European
Court of Human Rights in 2013, after gay couples were explicitly
excluded from a prior civil unions law in 2008.
“Instead of celebrating this, we should apologise to thousands of our fellow citizens,” Tsipras said.
The law was supported by 193 lawmakers out of 249 present, with 56 voting against it.
Amnesty International hailed the move as a “historic step” but noted
that lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex (LGBTI) persons
still faced hostility in Greece.
“Despite this first step, LGBTI people in Greece still live in a
climate of hostility from which the authorities are failing to protect
them adequately,” said Gauri van Gulik, Amnesty International’s Deputy
Director for Europe and Central Asia.
“Physical attacks are on the rise, hate speech is common and goes
unchecked by the authorities. Even displays of affection between
same-sex couples are censored on television,” van Gulik added.
Amnesty further pointed out that the law offers no gender recognition to transgender people.
In addition to Tsipras’ left-wing Syriza party, the bill was supported by another four parties.
However the nationalist Independent Greeks (ANEL), who are part of the governing coalition, voted against the motion.
“The Greek constitution protects motherhood. Is there motherhood in men?” asked ANEL lawmaker Vassilis Kokkalis.
– ‘Not a sin’ –
Members of the Greek gay, lesbian and transsexual community had earlier staged protests outside parliament and the Athens cathedral.
Members of the Greek gay, lesbian and transsexual community had earlier staged protests outside parliament and the Athens cathedral.
“Love is not a sin,” read a sign held by protesters as two young men dressed like priests kissed in front of the cathedral.
The country’s first two same-sex civil marriages held in 2008 were
annulled by a court a year later under pressure from the Greek Orthodox
Church, which officially frowns upon same-sex relations.
Lobbying by the church was also instrumental in excluding same-sex
couples from benefitting from the 2008 civil union bill which modernised
family law and aligned national law with EU rules.
A prominent Greek bishop this week described homosexuality as a “crime” and said “accursed” gays should be “spat upon.”
Same-sex marriage has already been legalised in 18 countries,
including 13 in Europe. Ireland last May became the first to approve gay
marriage through a referendum.
More than 60 percent of Slovenian voters opposed legalising gay
marriage in a referendum Sunday, where activists there had hoped to see
the largely Catholic nation become Europe’s first ex-communist country
to give same-sex couples the right to marry and adopt.
Greek parliament approves civil union for same-sex couples
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