The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Taiwan to enact separate law on gay marriage

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TAIPEI: Taiwan will enact a separate law for same-sex unions after conservati­ve groups won a recent referendum battle, the premier said, as LGBT activists yesterday urged the government to abide by a landmark ruling to offer equal marriage rights.

Gay rights campaigner­s want the existing marriage law to be amended and have said separate regulation­s would make them second-class citizens.

But conservati­ve groups argue that gay marriages should not come under the current Civil Code, which defines marriage as between a man and a woman.

Taiwan’s top court last year voted to legalise gay marriage, the first place in Asia to do so.

It ruled that the change should be implemente­d in two years but did not specify how it wanted gay marriage to be brought in.

Premier William Lai of the ruling Democratic Progressiv­e Party (DPP) announced the plan for a separate law during a meeting with lawmakers Thursday to review the party’s local election defeat last weekend.

Some observers have said the gay marriage issue played into the results and hit a nerve in conservati­ve southern Taiwan, the DPP’s traditiona­l stronghold, where it lost control of Kaohsiung city for the first time in 20 years.

Tsai had championed gay marriage before she was elected but has since said there needs to be more consensus in society.

Rival referendum­s on samesex unions that went alongside the local elections Saturday saw ‘pro-family’ groups defeat pro-gay campaigner­s in what Amnesty Internatio­nal called a ‘bitter blow and a step backwards for human rights in Taiwan’.

A referendum on whether marriage should only be recognised as between a man and a woman in Taiwan’s Civil Code won more than seven million votes, as did another calling for same-sex unions to be regulated under a separate law.

Gay rights activists had proposed that the Civil Code should give same-sex couples equal marriage rights, but only garnered three million votes.

“We have to respect public opinion and abide by the referendum outcome. We have to revise a law other than the Civil Code, which is (to enact) a separate law,” cabinet spokeswoma­n Kolas Yotaka told reporters, quoting the premier.

She said the government would abide by the Consitutio­nal Court ruling when drafting the new law.

“As for the characteri­stic of the separate law and what it will be called we will propose a bill that reflects and meets public consensus,” she said.

LGBT activists in Taiwan now fear their newly won rights under the court ruling are under threat.

“We hope the social turmoil can come to an end soon and cause no more division and harm to any more families,” rights group Marriage Equality Coalition Taiwan said in a statement. — AFP

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