Source: Human Rights Watch
Same-Sex Marriage Law is a Win for Fundamental Rights
(New York) – The Uruguay Senate, in approving a bill on April 2, 2013,
to legalize same-sex marriage, has moved to guarantee marriage equality
and diminish discrimination, Human Rights Watch said. The vote was 23 to
8. Uruguay would be the 12th country to approve same-sex marriage
nationwide.
The lower house of Uruguay’s legislature voted in December 2012 to
legalize same-sex marriage. The Senate bill included some modifications,
including a measure to raise the minimum age for marriage to 16 for
everyone, instead of the present age 12 for girls and 14 for boys.
Human Rights Watch urges all countries to eliminate child marriage and
to adopt 18 as a minimum age for marriage for both sexes.
“Uruguayan senators made the right decision by allowing same-sex couples to marry,” said Boris Dittrich, advocacy director of the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender (LGBT) Rights Program at
Human Rights Watch. “Final approval will enable gays and lesbians in
Uruguay to marry the person they love and will strengthen the
fundamental rights of everyone in Uruguay to equality and
non-discrimination.”
The modified law will most likely be discussed and voted upon by the
lower house later in April. It is anticipated that the law will pass and
that the first same-sex marriages could take place in July or August.
The lower house should move to pass this bill swiftly, Human Rights
Watch said.
Uruguay is not the first country in Latin America to introduce marriage
equality. In 2010, Argentina’s congress approved a marriage equality
law. Same-sex marriage became legal in Mexico City in
the same year. In 2011, Brazil’s Supreme Court ruled that same-sex
couples were entitled to partnership rights through a civil union
status. Since then, some Brazilian states – including the largest, São
Paulo – have begun performing civil marriages for same-sex couples.
Dittrich, a former member of the Dutch Parliament, initiated the debate
on marriage equality in the Dutch Parliament in 1994. After heated
debates in parliament and in society at large, the Netherlands
implemented same-sex marriage legislation in 2001, becoming the first
country in the world to approve gay marriage.
Other countries have followed suit. Same-sex marriage is now legal in
the Netherlands, Belgium, Canada, South Africa, Argentina, Spain,
Portugal, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Iceland, and parts of Mexico and
Brazil as well as in nine states in the United States (Connecticut,
Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Vermont,
Washington, and the District of Columbia).
Marriage equality legislation is being discussed in the parliaments of New Zealand, France, and the United Kingdom and is expected to pass in all three countries in 2013.
In June the Supreme Court of the United States is expected to issue
decisions in two cases, in which arguments were heard on March 26 and
27. Hollingsworth v. Perry challenges California’s Proposition 8, which
bans same-sex marriage. United States v. Windsor concerns the denial of
more than 1,000 types of federal benefits and programs to same-sex
married couples under the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), which
defines marriage as the union of a man and a woman.