BBC News, 30
July 2013
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| Same-sex marriages have been legal in Mexico City for years, now Colima allows civil unions |
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Colima has
become the latest Mexican state to allow same-sex couples to enter into civil
unions after a majority of local authorities passed a change in the state's
constitution.
Legalisation
on same-sex unions falls under state legislation, and a number of states have
divergent rules.
Mexico City
and the southern state of Quintana Roo allow gay marriages, while Coahuila
allows same-sex civil unions.
Congress in
Yucatan on the other hand banned same-sex marriage in 2009.
Seven out
of ten authorities in Colima approved the constitutional change, which had been
passed by the state's congress earlier this month.
Only two
Congressmen voted against the change, arguing the state should legalise gay
marriages rather than restricting same-sex couples to civil unions.
'More
integration'
News of the
change in the law in Colima came on the same day as Pope Francis told reporters
that gay people should not be marginalised but integrated into society.
Speaking to
reporters on a flight back from Brazil, the Pope reaffirmed the Roman Catholic
Church's position that homosexual acts were sinful, but homosexual orientation
was not.
Gay
marriage was legalised in Uruguay earlier this year, and in Argentina in 2010.
In Brazil,
the Supreme Court in May voted overwhelmingly in favour of allowing same-sex
couples the same legal rights as married heterosexuals, effectively authorising
gay marriage.


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