Taiwan has secured a first for Asia, reaching a landmark decision to legalise same-sex marriage, after its parliament rejected last-ditch attempts by conservative lawmakers to push a watered-down “civil-union” law.
The island’s lawmakers comfortably passed a law allowing same-sex couples to form “exclusive permanent unions” and a second clause that would let them apply for a “marriage registration” with government agencies.
Hundreds of gay rights supporters gathered near parliament in Taipei despite heavy rain as a mammoth legislative debate got under way over an issue that has bitterly divided the island.
Parliament was up against a ticking clock. The country’s top court has ruled that not allowing same-sex couples to marry violates the constitution. Judges gave the government until Friday next week to make the changes or see marriage equality enacted automatically. But they gave no guidance on how to do that.
With that deadline fast approaching, three bills were tabled for Friday’s vote – which also happens to be the International Day Against Homophobia, Transphobia and Biphobia.
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The most progressive was the government’s bill, the only one to use the word “marriage” and to offer limited adoption rights. It was backed – begrudgingly – by gay rights groups who saw it as the closest thing to full equality with heterosexual couples, despite its limitations.
Opponents tabled two other versions which avoid the word marriage, offering something closer to same-sex unions with no adoption rights.
Conservative and religious groups have been buoyed by a series of referendum wins in November, in which voters comprehensively rejected defining marriage as anything other than a union between a man and a woman.
In a Facebook post President Tsai Ing-wen said she recognised the issue had divided “families, generations and even inside religious groups”.
But she said the government’s bill was the only one that respected both the court judgement and the referendum. “Today, we have a chance to make history and show the world that progressive values can take root in an east Asian society,” she added in a tweet.
Tsai’s ruling Democratic Progressive party (DPP) holds the majority in parliament, occupying 68 out of 113 seats.
Taiwan’s LGBT community has been left in limbo the past two years, with many couples planning weddings ahead of the 24 May deadline but unsure of what marriage equality would look like.
“The world is watching to see if Taiwan’s parliament will write a new page in gender equality or deal another blow to Taiwan’s hard-fought democracy, human rights and the rule of law,” said Jennifer Lu, a spokeswoman for Marriage Equality Coalition Taiwan.
“For the gay communities what matters the most is whether we can legally get married on May 24 and be listed as the spouse in ID cards, to be treated and respected as the ’spouse’ in the whole legal system … and whether same-sex families can obtain legal parental rights for their children.”
Cindy Su was one of thousands of gay marriage supporters gathered outside parliament on Friday ahead of the debate. “We are just a group of people who want to live well on this land and who love each other,” she told the crowd.
But opponents warned that “forcefully” passing a gay marriage law would intensify tensions. “The cabinet’s bill ignores the referendum results and that is unacceptable,” said Lai Shyh-bao of the opposition Kuomintang party, who proposed one of the bills backed by conservatives.
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Even in animal kingdom it is not same sex, why is it among human beings.