Uruguay to pass gay union law
Uruguay to pass gay union law
From correspondents in Montevideo
September 14, 2006 10:08am
Copyright by Reuters
URUGUAY'S Congress will pass a law to legalise gay and heterosexual civil unions, granting those couples the same rights as married ones, a ruling party Senator said today.
The Senate already passed the Bill, and Senator Margarita Percovich told Reuters the lower house is expected to approve it easily given the governing leftist coalition's majority.
The legislation will allow gay and straight couples to form civil unions after living together for at least five years.
"With this initiative, we are recognizing rights that were unclear under the law and which judges did not know how to resolve," said Senator Percovich, one of the Bill's backers.
"If there is recognition (of the partnership), it's as though it were a marriage," she said.
The law would ensure inheritance rights for couples in civil unions and offer other advantages such as shared parental rights and pension benefits.
Gay marriage is still illegal in Uruguay, a tiny South American country squeezed between Argentina and Brazil which is known for its secular streak in a predominantly Roman Catholic continent.
The Argentine capital of Buenos Aires legalised same-sex unions in 2002, in a move hailed as a first in Latin America.
From correspondents in Montevideo
September 14, 2006 10:08am
Copyright by Reuters
URUGUAY'S Congress will pass a law to legalise gay and heterosexual civil unions, granting those couples the same rights as married ones, a ruling party Senator said today.
The Senate already passed the Bill, and Senator Margarita Percovich told Reuters the lower house is expected to approve it easily given the governing leftist coalition's majority.
The legislation will allow gay and straight couples to form civil unions after living together for at least five years.
"With this initiative, we are recognizing rights that were unclear under the law and which judges did not know how to resolve," said Senator Percovich, one of the Bill's backers.
"If there is recognition (of the partnership), it's as though it were a marriage," she said.
The law would ensure inheritance rights for couples in civil unions and offer other advantages such as shared parental rights and pension benefits.
Gay marriage is still illegal in Uruguay, a tiny South American country squeezed between Argentina and Brazil which is known for its secular streak in a predominantly Roman Catholic continent.
The Argentine capital of Buenos Aires legalised same-sex unions in 2002, in a move hailed as a first in Latin America.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home