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| Costa Rica is the first Central American country to legalise same-sex marriage (AFP Photo/Ezequiel BECERRA) |
San José (AFP) - Costa Rica legalised same-sex marriage on Tuesday, becoming the first Central American country to do so and sparking an emotional response from rights campaigners as the first weddings were held overnight.
Celebrations
were cancelled because of the coronavirus pandemic, but a special program about
LGBT rights was broadcast on public television and online after a court ruling
came into force at midnight.
"This
change will bring about a significant social and cultural transformation,
allowing thousands of people to marry," said President Carlos Alvarado in
the program.
Costa Rica
is the eighth country in the Americas to recognise same-sex marriage -- a group
that includes Brazil, Ecuador and Argentina, as well as Canada and the US.
The Supreme
Court in August 2018 ruled that a ban on gay marriage was unconstitutional and
gave parliament 18 months to amend the laws. It failed to do that, so the
provision was automatically annulled.
"Costa
Rica is celebrating today: marriage equality has become a reality in the
country -- the first one in Central America," tweeted the International
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans and Intersex Association (ILGA)..
"We
rejoice with you: congratulations to all those who worked so hard to make it
happen!"
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| Gay rights activists have long campaigned for the right to marry in Costa Rica (AFP Photo/Ezequiel BECERRA) |
Victor
Madrigal-Borloz, the UN's Independent Expert on Sexual Orientation and Gender
Identity, called the change "an extraordinary moment of celebration"
in a tweet posted on Monday.
Strong
Catholic tradition
He
expressed "gratitude to the work of so many activists, and of quiet
reflection of the lives of those who lived without seeing this moment".
Moments
after midnight, Dunia Araya and Alexandra Quiros tied the knot in a town
northwest of the capital, San Jose. The young women, both dressed in white,
took their vows before a notary wearing a face mask as part of measures to stop
the spread of coronavirus.
Costa Rica
has a strong Catholic tradition and has also seen a proliferation of
evangelical churches in recent decades. Many followers of those denominations
are opposed to gay marriage.
Alvarado, a
centrist, was elected to the presidency in April 2018 by comfortably seeing off
a challenge from evangelical preacher Fabricio Alvarado, who campaigned against
same-sex marriage.
The Supreme
Court decision complied with an opinion given by the Inter-American Court of
Human Rights, declaring that homosexual couples have the same rights to marry
as heterosexual ones.


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