Same-sex marriage bill introduced in Chile
washingtonblade.com, 8/12/2014
Chilean
lawmakers and an LGBT advocacy group on Saturday introduced a bill that would
extend marriage rights to same-sex couples in the South American country.
The Movement for Homosexual
Integration and Liberation said in a press release the measure that it and
Congressman Gabriel Silber Romo of the Christian Democratic Party have proposed
would change “a man and a woman” to “two people” in Chile’s marriage law. The
proposal would also replace “husband and wife” with “spouse” and amend the
concept of procreation to “raise children.”
“With this bill we are looking
to eradicate the historic discrimination that affects people simply for loving
and living with someone of the same sex,” said the Movement for Homosexual
Integration and Liberation in its press release. “Respect for family diversity
is at the heart of this bill that we celebrate with backing throughout the
political world and also with the broad support of citizen organizations.”
The same-sex marriage bill’s
introduction comes against the backdrop of the ongoing debate on a separate
measure that would allow gays and lesbians to enter into civil unions.
The Chilean Senate in October voted
to advance the measure — known by the Spanish acronym AVP that
roughly translates into life partner agreement in English. Members of the
Chilean House of Deputies have yet to vote on the proposal.
President Michelle Bachelet
backs the bill.
She also publicly supported
marriage rights for same-sex couples during her 2013 presidential campaign.
Advocates, Bachelet government
discuss marriage lawsuit
The Inter-American Court of
Human Rights in 2012 ruled in favor of lesbian Judge Karen Atala who lost
custody of her three daughters to her ex-husband seven years earlier because of
her sexual orientation. The Chilean government subsequently apologized to
Atala, paid her $70,000 and offered her medical and psychological care.
The Movement for Homosexual
Liberation and Integration in 2012 filed a lawsuit with the Inter-American
Court of Human Rights on behalf of three Chilean gay couples seeking marriage
rights. Then-President Sebastián Piñera’s government argued against what
it described as the “new definition of marriage” in a brief it filed with
the lawsuit in November 2013.
Members of the Movement for
Homosexual Integration and Liberation and representatives of Bachelet’s
government discussed the marriage lawsuit during a meeting that took place in
Santiago, the Chilean capital, on Nov. 25.
The outcome of the meeting has
yet to be made public.
“We want to contribute
significantly to the government’s interest in amplifying the debate about these
issues and thus advance the approval of this norm,” said Rolando Jiménez,
president of the Movement for Homosexual Integration and Liberation, after the
introduction of the same-sex marriage bill. “The marriage equality law is part
of a presidential agenda for the first time, and it therefore provides the best
conditions for the advancement of equality. The current marriage law is
homophobic because it excludes people based on their sexual orientation. Today
we are moving forward towards the end of this unjust reality.”
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