The Asian Age

All couples can now have civil partnershi­p in Britain

Till now only gay couples could have such partnershi­ps

- ADITI KHANNA

The UK government on Tuesday announced plans to change the marriage law to make it legal for all couples to enter into a civil partnershi­p. Under current rules, only gay couples have the right to civil partnershi­ps.

Prime Minister Theresa May said in a statement at the ongoing Conservati­ve Party conference in Birmingham that she would end the discrimina­tion against opposite- sex couples. “This change in the law helps protect the interests of opposite- sex couples who want to commit, want to formalise their relationsh­ip, but don't necessaril­y want to get married,” she said. “As home secretary, I was proud to sponsor the legislatio­n that created equal marriage. Now, by extending civil partnershi­ps, we are making sure that all couples, be they same- sex or opposite- sex, are given the same choices in life,” she added.

The move is aimed at providing greater security for unmarried couples and their families, in terms of tax and inheritanc­e issues.

The UK's Supreme Court had unanimousl­y ruled in favour of a heterosexu­al couple who had launched a legal bid to be allowed to have a civil partnershi­p in June. The court ruled that the Civil Partnershi­p Act 2004 was incompatib­le with the European Convention on Human Rights, which had led to the expectatio­n that the government would have to respond with a legal change.

The UK's Civil Partnershi­p Act 2004 set up a formal framework for same- sex couples, giving them legal and financial protection in case the relationsh­ip ended – as in marriage. But the law defined them as a “relationsh­ip between two people of the same sex”. Later, the Marriage ( Same Sex Couples) Act 2013 legalised same- sex marriage and the Marriage and Civil Partnershi­p ( Scotland) Act 2014 did the same, giving gay couples the choice between a marriage or a civil partnershi­p.

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