The Malta Business Weekly

Gay wedding ban sparks cruise boycott call

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Carnival Corporatio­n, the cruise operator that owns P&O and Cunard, is facing a boycott from LGBT travellers after halting gay weddings.

The company was forced to stop allowing same-sex unions because at least nine of its ships are registered in Bermuda.

The British Overseas Territory legalised gay weddings in May last year, but the law was repealed last month following a change of government.

That legally prevented Carnival from allowing same-sex ceremonies on board.

A P&O Cruises spokesman said: “Carnival Corporatio­n believes that same sex marriage should be legalised in Bermuda and therefore we are opposed to the new law. We are currently working with local interest groups in Bermuda and elsewhere to explore options in relation to this.”

Some LGBT travel agencies have called for a boycott of Carnival cruises because the company has not moved the registrati­on of its ships to another jurisdicti­on.

P&O Cruises has six ships registered in Bermuda, while Cunard has three. London-listed Carnival is the world’s largest cruise operator with about half the market and a fleet of 102 ships.

Darren Burn, founder and managing director of OutOfOffic­e.com, a gay travel agency, said some customers had raised the issue with his staff.

He was also concerned about Bermuda’s decision to reverse marriage equality, which in his view was “more dangerous than not changing the law in the first place”.

Bermuda has a population of about 65,000, but tourism is one of its biggest industries, with more than 600,000 visitors a year - most of whom are American.

Some US gay rights groups have called for LGBT travellers to boycott Bermuda in the wake of the ban.

Tony Brannon, a Bermudian campaigner, said reinstatin­g the island’s gay wedding ban had “given Bermuda a huge PR black eye”.

Legalisati­on came about after the Bermuda supreme court ruled that excluding same-sex couples from marriage amounted to discrimina­tion.

The Domestic Partnershi­ps Act was then passed by Bermuda’s House of Assembly and signed into law by the island’s governor John Rankin last month, making Bermuda the first country to revoke gay marriage.

Mr Brannon said a case would be heard by the supreme court in May arguing that the ban violated Bermuda’s constituti­on.

If the legal challenge was successful, he hoped the government would accept the decision.

As Bermuda is an overseas dependent territory, the UK government could block Bermuda’s move to ban same-sex unions.

However, Foreign Office minister Harriett Baldwin told the Commons last month that it “would not be appropriat­e to use this power to block legislatio­n, which can only can be used where there is a legal or constituti­onal basis for doing so, and even then only in exceptiona­l circumstan­ces”.

Labour MP Chris Bryant said Britain’s failure to act “totally undermines UK efforts to advance LGBT rights”.

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