legalization of marriage and adoption for same-sex couples

Greece said ” Yes “ Thursday February 15 to homosexual marriage and the adoption of children by same-sex couples, a major societal reform carried out by the conservative Prime Minister, who saw “a turning point for human rights”.

Once the law is promulgated, this Mediterranean country, in which the influential Orthodox Church was fiercely opposed to reform, will become the 37th country in the world, the 17th country in the European Union and the first Orthodox Christian country to legalize adoption for same-sex parents.

Greece: examination of same-sex marriage divides society

Of the 254 deputies present in the unicameral Parliament, 176 voted for, 76 against and two abstained, after two days of a sometimes heated debate. When the result was announced, dozens of people, brandishing rainbow flags, burst into joy in front of the Parliament in central Athens.

“A turning point for human rights”

For LGBT+ associations, Greece lived with this vote “a historic day”according to Adriana Zahari, a 22-year-old student present in front of Parliament. “We are so happy with this result, we have been waiting for it for so long”welcomed the young woman.

Right-wing Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis welcomed “a turning point for human rights” in a “progressive and democratic country, passionately attached to European values” at a time when the European Parliament, in a recent resolution, expressed alarm “very serious threats to democracy, the rule of law and fundamental rights in Greece”particularly around the decline in press freedom.

Marriage for all: ten years later, the law has “led to more acceptance”

“From tomorrow, one more barrier between us (citizens, Editor’s note) will be removed and will become a bridge of coexistence in a free state between free citizens”he also assured during an intervention before the deputies earlier in the day.

There was little doubt that the bill would pass, due to the support of several left-wing opposition parties. But Kyriakos Mitsotakis was faced with rebellion from the most conservative wing of his New Democracy (ND) party, opposed to this reform.

Strengthened legal guarantees

Comfortably re-elected last year, he made same-sex marriage a flagship measure of his second term. She “considerably improves the lives of our fellow citizens” homosexuals and their children, he judged, recalling that this was a question of“an existing social reality” and that by voting for homosexual marriage, the deputies would lift “a serious inequality for our democracy”.

Since 2015, Greece has had a civil union but it does not offer the same legal guarantees as civil marriage. The Prime Minister also insisted on the need to put an end to grotesque situations regarding same-sex parenthood. Because, until now, only the biological parent has rights over the child. In the event of the death of this biological parent, the State withdraws custody from the other parent. And the children of two fathers cannot obtain identity papers, the name of a mother being obligatory in civil status.

Marriage for all: the debate rebounds in Asia

For Konstantinos Androulakis, a 46-year-old Greek married in the United Kingdom to Michael and father of two children aged 6 and 11, Greece lives “a historic moment”. “It’s an important stepping stone”told AFP this London consultant who came to Greece for the occasion, expressing the hope that in the future “the rights of LGBT+ people are improving in Greece in general”. Some, however, deplored that the bill does not grant surrogacy (GPA) to homosexual couples.

Oppositions to adoption

Most of the bitter debate which has agitated the country in recent weeks has concerned the question of same-sex parenthood. Opinion studies showed that Greeks were generally in favor of same-sex marriage but opposed to adoption by same-sex couples. In a country with an overwhelming Orthodox majority, the Church was totally opposed to the project.

“Children have an innate need and therefore the right to grow up with a male father and a female mother”, assures the holy synod, which sent a missive to all the deputies. But only around 4,000 opponents, led in particular by Niki, the far-right party close to Russia, found themselves on Sunday in front of Parliament brandishing icons of the Virgin and Christian crosses.

Human rights: Russia condemned for its refusal of homosexual couples

Quite a symbol: in September, Stefanos Kasselakis, who publicly displays his homosexuality and recently married his partner in the United States, took the reins of the left-wing Syriza party, the leading opposition force in Parliament.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *