Daily Tribune (Philippines)

China’s LGBT couples ‘wed’ online

AS GAY MARRIAGE PUSH STALLS In China only couples who have tied the knot can adopt children, access fertility services or jointly buy a house

- AFP,

BEIJING (AFP) — Engaged for over three years, Guo and Zhu are fed up waiting for Chinese lawmakers to approve same-sex marriage — instead, they have turned online to gain recognitio­n for their relationsh­ip.

Despite a shake-up of China’s marriage law last month — and a groundswel­l of support for same-sex unions in the socially conservati­ve country — demands to make gay marriage legal have not been met.

The two men joined thousands of other couples announcing their “wedding” through an app where same-sex couples are given an unrecogniz­ed marriage certificat­e to share with friends, colleagues, and the public.

“We can’t live in the shadows anymore,” artist Guo told using only his surname.

“My partner’s family is still coming to terms with it.”

In China only couples who have tied the knot can adopt children, access fertility services or jointly buy a house.

Legalizing gay marriage was among top suggestion­s made by the public last year when lawmakers sought opinions on the country’s first-ever civil code.

But a dismayed LGBT community has been left to redraw their battle plans after the text of the code — which governs everything from property contracts to adoption — defined marriage as “a union between a man and a woman.”

“I feel very disappoint­ed,” said activist Sun Wenlin, who filed China’s first — and unsuccessf­ul — court case to marry a same-sex partner in 2015.

After the civil code legislatio­n was approved, Sun launched his WeChat “wedding” app to raise the profile of gay relationsh­ips. More than 3,000 couples have used it so far to get the unrecogniz­ed marriage certificat­es.

 ?? STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? FORMER French Prime minister Francois Fillon returns to the courtroom at the Paris' courthouse, for the hearing of his trial over claims he embezzled over one million euros in an alleged fake-jobs fraud.
STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE FORMER French Prime minister Francois Fillon returns to the courtroom at the Paris' courthouse, for the hearing of his trial over claims he embezzled over one million euros in an alleged fake-jobs fraud.

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