Mexico City grants gay couples civil unions
Simon Kelly
Issue date: 3/30/07 Section: World
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On March 16, after nearly seven years of litigation, legislators in Mexico City passed a new law permitting same sex couples the right to civil union. This law, which grants gay couples pension and inheritance rights, is generally believed to mark the beginning of a new age of plurality in Mexico, despite mounting opposition from both President Calderon's conservative party and the Roman Catholic Church.
However, because most cities in Mexico, the capital included, are governed by left-wing parties more than the national government, Calderon and the church may have difficulty suppressing the impact of this case as it ripples outward from Mexico City.
"With this law, a history of exclusion comes to an end. Today, the love that before did not speak its name has now entered into the public spotlight," said journalist Antonio Medina to BBC News. Medina and his partner, Jorge Cerpa, were one of the first couples to take advantage of the new law.
To the relief of conservatives, however, the law distinguishes civil union from marriage by not granting gay couples the right to adopt. Claiming that traditional family values will now be jeopardized, numerous conservative Catholic objectors are flooding the streets of Mexico's major cities to voice their complaints.
"It is simply not the will of God to have acts of homosexuality," said Armando Martinez Gomez, president of the Association of Catholic Lawyers, to BBC News. "We are not against gay people, but we believe a union between a man and a woman is for the creation of children."
Meanwhile, other states across Mexico are starting to follow the capital's example. The deeply religious state of Puebla, whose capital is known for its 365 Catholic churches, is even beginning to mull over gay rights legislation. The northern border state of Coahuila has already passed its own civil union law, which was modeled after the one framed in the capital but put into effect nearly two weeks before it.
However, because most cities in Mexico, the capital included, are governed by left-wing parties more than the national government, Calderon and the church may have difficulty suppressing the impact of this case as it ripples outward from Mexico City.
"With this law, a history of exclusion comes to an end. Today, the love that before did not speak its name has now entered into the public spotlight," said journalist Antonio Medina to BBC News. Medina and his partner, Jorge Cerpa, were one of the first couples to take advantage of the new law.
To the relief of conservatives, however, the law distinguishes civil union from marriage by not granting gay couples the right to adopt. Claiming that traditional family values will now be jeopardized, numerous conservative Catholic objectors are flooding the streets of Mexico's major cities to voice their complaints.
"It is simply not the will of God to have acts of homosexuality," said Armando Martinez Gomez, president of the Association of Catholic Lawyers, to BBC News. "We are not against gay people, but we believe a union between a man and a woman is for the creation of children."
Meanwhile, other states across Mexico are starting to follow the capital's example. The deeply religious state of Puebla, whose capital is known for its 365 Catholic churches, is even beginning to mull over gay rights legislation. The northern border state of Coahuila has already passed its own civil union law, which was modeled after the one framed in the capital but put into effect nearly two weeks before it.
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