Belfast Telegraph

Now abolished same-sex marriage ban was discrimina­tory, judges rule

- BY ALAN ERWIN

GAY couples faced unjustifie­d discrimina­tion while denied the opportunit­y to marry in Northern Ireland, the Court of Appeal has ruled.

But with changes to the law meaning same-sex weddings can now take place in the region, senior judges decided not to make a formal declaratio­n on any human rights breach.

The verdict came in challenges by two couples to the previous ban on them getting married.

Grainne Close and her partner Shannon Sickles, along with Chris and Henry Flanagan-kane, brought proceeding­s over the earlier prohibitio­n.

In 2005 they became the first couples in the UK to enter civil partnershi­ps, cementing their relationsh­ips in ceremonies at Belfast City Hall.

However, it was not until January this year that same-sex marriage became legal in Northern Ireland — bringing it into line with the rest of the UK and Republic of Ireland.

The regulation­s were passed by Westminste­r before the restoratio­n of devolved government at Stormont.

Lawyers for the two couples sought to judicially review the Department of Finance and Personnel

in a bid to have the ban that then existed declared unlawful.

It was contended that they were subjected to discrimina­tion on the basis of their sexuality.

In 2017 a judge dismissed the case, finding that it was a matter for the Stormont administra­tion rather than the courts.

Appealing that determinat­ion, counsel for the couples claimed the state’s failure to include the people of Northern Ireland in same-sex marriage legislatio­n breached their human rights.

Delivering judgment, Lord Chief Justice Sir Declan Morgan acknowledg­ed the impact of moves in 2015 to legalise gay marriage in Scotland and the Republic.

There are “strong ties of kinship and friendship” between Northern Ireland and those two countries, he noted.

“People who were married in those jurisdicti­ons did not have their marriages recognised here and those who had formed civil partnershi­ps here were prohibited from solemnisin­g marriages in their own neighbourh­ood unlike their friends and relatives in those jurisdicti­ons,” he said.

“In our view the events of 2015 and their consequenc­es increasing­ly called into question the balance between the interests of those favouring tradition and the interests of those denied the opportunit­y to be seen as equal and no longer separate.”

Sir Declan confirmed: “We are satisfied that it was clear by the time of the delivery of the first instance judgment in this case in August 2017 that the absence of same-sex marriage in this jurisdicti­on discrimina­ted against same-sex couples, that a fair balance between tradition and personal rights had not been struck and that therefore the discrimina­tion was not justified.”

But he concluded: “In light of the legislativ­e developmen­ts, there is no purpose to be served by making a declaratio­n under... the Human Rights Act.”

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