Yahoo – AFP,
Allan Garcia
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A gay
couple takes part in the first same-sex mass wedding in Acapulco,
Guerrero
State, Mexico on July 10, 2015 (AFP Photo/Pedro Pardo)
|
Acapulco
(Mexico) (AFP) - Twenty gay and lesbian couples got married in a mass wedding
on an Acapulco beach on Friday, one month after Mexico's top court all but
legalized same-sex marriage nationwide.
With
Guerrero state's governor and wife as witnesses, the 15 male and five female
couples exchanged vows as the sun set, surrounded by some 200 people in a
celebration that included cake and a mariachi band.
"It's
a big step. It's something I have always wanted since I was very little and I
wanted to start a family," said Alejandra Jimenez Soler after she married
a hotel worker whom she had been dating for more than year.
Holding a
bouquet of roses, the 17-year-old Acapulco resident was among the youngest
people to get married.
Despite her
youth, Jimenez said she took a "responsible, mature, reasoned"
decision in the face of her family's disappointment with her homosexuality.
"I
feel terrible that my family isn't here to support me because they should
accept you as you are," she said.
Under the
theme of "Guerrero, to love is a right," the mass ceremony was sealed
with a toast, a wedding cake and kisses as the mariachis played cheerful music.
Civil
right
Governor
Rogelio Ortega promoted the mass wedding despite opposition from some
politicians and the Roman Catholic church.
Mexico's
expansion of gay marriage -- it was already legal in Mexico City and two of 31
states -- preceded a US Supreme Court ruling that legalized same-sex unions
throughout the United States.
Mexico's
top court opened the door to same-sex marriage through the country of nearly
120 million people on June 3, when it ruled that it was unconstitutional for
states to ban them.
![]() |
Twenty gay
and lesbian couples have married in a mass wedding on an
Acapulco beach, one
month after Mexico's top court all but legalized same-sex
marriage nationwide
(AFP Photo/Pedro Pardo)
|
While the
"jurisprudence" issued by the court does not oblige states to change
their laws, it requires courts to rule in favor of same-sex couples whose
marriages were rejected.
Following
the ruling, Ortega's administration instructed civil registries to approve gay
marriage licenses.
Acapulco's
mayor tried to block same-sex marriages, arguing that the local civil code must
be amended first.
But the
civil registry went along with the governor's orders and approved Friday's
marriage licenses.
"We
respect all beliefs because we are inclusive when it comes to civil
rights," Ortega said during the ceremony.
Mexico City
was the first jurisdiction in Latin America to legalize same-sex marriage in
2010.
Argentina,
Brazil and Uruguay have since made gay marriage legal, too, while religiously
conservative Chile approved same-sex civil unions this year.


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