The Citizen (Gauteng)

Cope scores win for same sex couples

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Eric Naki

The Congress of the People (Cope) is making waves with leading constituti­onal rights legislatio­n after a Private Members Bill the party initiated was adopted by the portfolio committee on home affairs yesterday.

Cope chief whip and party deputy secretary-general Deidre Carter initiated and tabled the Private Members Bill that is aimed at removing section 6 of the Civil Union Act to provide for home affairs officers not to refuse to marry same-sex couples.

A constituti­onal expert welcomed this as “progressiv­e”, adding it was good that no state employee may refuse to marry same-sex people, otherwise the state had to apply disciplina­ry measures against the state officer concerned.

Currently, section 6 allowed the officers in state employ to apply to be exempt from solemnisin­g same-sex marriages on the grounds of their conscience or religious belief.

But that change.

“This provision impinged on fundamenta­l rights enshrined in our constituti­on, including that of equality,” Carter said.

The committee members supported the Bill, which was one of two constituti­on-based Bills that Cope initiated and tabled in the National Assembly.

The other was the Private Members Bill submitted by Cope president Mosiuoa Lekota seeking to allow individual­s to stand as independen­t candidates for election to the National Assembly and provincial legislatur­es.

Presently, only at local government level are independen­t candidates allowed, something that Lekota said was unconstitu­tional.

If his proposal was adopted, it would help to return the power to the people instead of residing with political parties.

Recently, the Constituti­onal Court, led by Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng, voiced concern about the lack of legislativ­e guidance to enable an individual’s right to stand for public office, something Mogoeng said was “tied up to the right to vote in elections for any legislativ­e body”.

An upbeat Carter said that with the amendment of section 6 of the Civil Union Act, the state may not unfairly discrimina­te against anyone on the grounds of sexual orientatio­n and values, and principles by which the country’s public administra­tion should be governed.

The adoption of the Bill was unlikely to meet resistance from the majority of political parties represente­d in parliament unless it would be merely for political grandstand­ing.

Constituti­onal law expert Prof Pierre de Vos welcomed the change which, he said, was a “progressiv­e developmen­t” which was in line with the constituti­on. is soon going to

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