Malta legalises same-sex marriage

Malta legalises same-sex marriage

by Joseph Anthony
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People celebrate in front of the rainbow-colour lit Auberge de Castille, the office of Prime Minister Joseph Muscat, after the Maltese parliament voted to legalise same-sex marriage on the Roman Catholic Mediterranean island, in Valletta, Malta, July 12, 2017

Maltese lawmakers voted on Wednesday to legalise same-sex marriage on the Roman Catholic Mediterranean island, fulfilling Prime Minister Joseph Muscatโ€™s campaign promise to make this the first law brought before parliament in his new term.

The law, which drew cross-party support, removes words including as โ€œhusbandโ€, โ€œwifeโ€, โ€œmotherโ€ and โ€œfatherโ€ from the Marriage Act and replaces them with the gender-neutral โ€œspouseโ€, โ€œparent who gave birthโ€ and โ€œparent who did not give birthโ€.

Muscat said such wording was needed to avoid categorising any member of society. He rejected accusations that this could spell the end to โ€œMotherโ€™s Dayโ€ or โ€œFatherโ€™s Dayโ€, saying such suggestions were โ€œlaughableโ€.

โ€œI think this is an historic vote. It shows that our democracy and our society are maturing โ€ฆ It is a society where we can all say we are equal,โ€ the prime minister told reporters.

Muscat won a second term in office on June 3 and had vowed to reinforce his call for equality in society.

Once a staunchly conservative nation, Malta has been steadily adopting more progressive legislation in recent years. In 2011, the country voted in a referendum to allow divorce, and in 2014 it approved civil partnerships.

Malta was the 24th country in the world to legalise same-sex marriage with Tuesdayโ€™s vote coming just two weeks after German lawmakers approved a similar measure in June.

The opposition Nationalist Party backed the introduction of same-sex marriage, despite fierce criticism from some conservatives, who said it marked a damaging departure from the partyโ€™s Christian-Democratic principles.

โ€œYou have pushed the party into a lose-lose situation and it seems many of you cannot even see it,โ€ said former finance minister Tonio Fenech, who is no longer a member of parliament.

In the end, only one opposition lawmaker voted against the bill, while 66 parliamentarians supported it. There were no abstentions.

Opposition leader Simon Busuttil said his party backed the law because society was changing and because it did not alter anything from the civil partnerships law which gave civil partners the same rights as married couples.

The Malta Gay Rights Movement celebrated the new law with a party attended by hundreds in a square outside the prime ministerโ€™s office in the capital, Valletta.

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