Los Angeles Times

Hundreds wed in Taiwan

Over 500 same-sex couples register their marriages on the first day it’s legal to do so.

- By Ralph Jennings Jennings is a special correspond­ent.

TAIPEI, Taiwan — Amber Wang and Kristin Huang felt a little nervous about showing their faces Friday. Then it hit them that they were making history.

“I think maybe in [the] future our picture will show up in some sources, and classes will remember this thing in our history,” Huang said, turning toward a thicket of television cameras.

The two 24-year-olds from Taipei joined 526 other same-sex couples in registerin­g their marriages Friday, the first day it was allowed under a law passed last week that is the first of its kind in Asia and the culminatio­n of years of struggle in Taiwan.

“I feel very proud of Taiwan, because we are the first country in Asia to legalize gay marriage,” Huang said while filling out marriage paperwork at a mediapacke­d registrati­on office in central Taipei. They were among 20 couples who married as a group at the district office Friday morning and attended a joint garden party just outside.

Legislator­s passed the law, despite divided public opinion, after more than two years of back-and-forth involving the Constituti­onal Court and a voter referendum. The law advocated by a two-decade-old local LGBTQ movement gives same-sex couples most of the same legal rights offered to male-female counterpar­ts. Same-sex couples can, for example, raise children together, inherit each other’s property and sign each other’s medical paperwork.

The new marriage law helps individual­s such as Cheng Chih-yuan. Cheng had seen her partner of nine years through hospital visits, including an operation. One hospital initially wouldn’t let Cheng sign medical forms because the two co-workers in Taipei’s finance sector weren’t married.

“I couldn’t sign for her and she was delayed for quite a few hours,” Cheng said. “The hospital made it hard for us.” They got married Friday. Yang Hsun and her new spouse, Hsu Pei-chieh, looked forward mainly to giving their five-year relationsh­ip a name the world could understand instead of asking quizzical questions about their unmarried but going-steady status. They expect better treatment when traveling overseas, such as joint accident insurance coverage, following their marriage Friday.

Yang, a 29-year-old engineer, and Hsu, 30, an office worker in Taipei, registered in Yang’s rural home county to make a statement in that relatively conservati­ve part of Taiwan. “It’s a way of giving them an education in marriage equality,” Hsu said as the couple prepared for the registrati­on accompanie­d by three family members. “We’re happy Taiwan can have this day.”

Some newlyweds had to overcome conservati­ve views, including those of their parents, to prep for marriage.

“The first time I attended an LGBTQ rally, I took a rainbow flag and waved it diligently, but when I got back on the road I put it away and didn’t dare take it out,” said Lin Hsuan, 31, holding back tears. He and his spouse, Yuan Shanming, 30, who have been together for more than a decade, registered in Taipei on Friday in matching peachcolor­ed suits, behind flower bouquets and facing a witness in rainbow-hued clothes. “Now today I can tell everyone to their faces that we’re gay and we’re proud of it.”

Same-sex marriage opponents including religious groups vowed this week to cast protest votes in the January 2020 parliament­ary and presidenti­al elections. Letting same-sex couples marry deprives children of mother-father households and will lead to insurance benefit scams, opponents have argued.

The law also defies a November 2018 national advisory referendum, they contend, in which more than 7.6 million voters, or 72%, said marriage should be restricted to one man and one woman. Legislator­s decided instead that all Taiwanese people should have equal access to marriage.

“We respect public opinion and we’re angry that it’s not being respected,” said Huang Tsu-chen, an event organizer with the Taipeibase­d opposition group Union of Sons and Daughters. “Elected representa­tives shouldn’t go against the people’s sentiment.”

Going forward, LGBTQ activists will use movies about same-sex couples among other “exchanges with society” to educate Taiwanese on the issues, said Joyce Teng, deputy coordinato­r with the advocacy group Marriage Equality Coalition Taiwan. “This society still has a lot of misunderst­anding,” she said.

 ?? Sam Yeh AFP/Getty Images ?? TWO COUPLES embrace after registerin­g their marriages in Taipei. “I feel very proud of Taiwan, because we are the first country in Asia to legalize gay marriage,” said one woman who married her partner on Friday.
Sam Yeh AFP/Getty Images TWO COUPLES embrace after registerin­g their marriages in Taipei. “I feel very proud of Taiwan, because we are the first country in Asia to legalize gay marriage,” said one woman who married her partner on Friday.

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