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The Netherlands OKs Gay Marriages
By ANTHONY DEUTSCH, Associated Press Writer THE HAGUE, Netherlands
(AP)
The Netherlands lawmakers on Tuesday gave same-sex couples the
right to marriage and all the trappings, including adoption
and divorce - approving legislation that gives gays rights beyond
those offered in any other country. The new law will bring little
change to the daily lives of most gays in a country that has
long been at the vanguard of gay rights. But activists say it
marks a bold step toward recognizing the equality of gay and
heterosexual unions in the Netherlands.
Lawmakers thumped their desks in approval when the vote passed
109-33 in the lower house, and some of the scores of witnesses
in the packed public gallery applauded and embraced. The bill
still needs approval by the upper house, considered a formality,
and is expected to take effect next year. Opponents warned the
legislation will isolate the Netherlands and said it threatens
Dutch values. ``We are going in the completely wrong direction,''
said lawmaker Kees van der Staaij of the Reformed Political
Party. ``We are ending an age-old tradition anchored in the
Bible.''
Under the bill, gay couples can convert their current ``registered
same-sex partnerships'' to full-fledged marriages, complete
with wider adoption rights and guidelines for divorce. However,
they are barred from adopting children overseas because of potential
confrontation with countries that don't allow gays to marry.
``We now have a choice,'' said Mark Wagenbuur who came to The
Hague to witness the vote with his partner, Lei Lennaerts, and
two other gay friends. Wagenbuur, 34, and Lennaerts, 35, don't
plan any adoptions, but said they will formalize their long-standing
relationship with a formal marriage. ``Should I ask his father
for his hand or should he ask mine?'' Wagenbuur asked with a
laugh. The law puts the Dutch at the forefront of the gay rights
movement, a position held by Denmark since that country gave
official sanction to gay marriages in 1989.
Danish gay couples enjoy the same rights as heterosexuals except
for the right to adopt children. In May 1999, they won the right
to adopt their partner's children but adoption from outside
the marriage remains forbidden. Sweden also allows gays to register
as couples with most of the rights of marriage. Vermont has
the closest thing in the United States to gay marriage after
approval of a law by the state legislature last spring. The
law created civil unions, a legal institution parallel to marriage
that provides the same rights, benefits and responsibilities
to same-sex couples. Dutch legislators said the bill will not
open the Netherlands to so-called ``marriage tourism,'' since
marriages are allowed only for citizens or people with residency
permits. ``Tourists cannot marry here,'' said Boris Dittrich,
one of the legislators who initiated the bill.
Gay couples who legally wed in the Netherlands also will find
few countries recognizing the marriage, he said, citing a survey
conducted by the Dutch Foreign Ministry. Only a few Scandinavian
and European countries said they would recognize the marriages
of Dutch gays who move to their countries. Andrew Fielding,
spokesman of the European Union Commission, said recognition
of Dutch gay marriages will be ``entirely a matter for each
member nation'' in the 15-member union. It wasn't until two
years ago that the Netherlands allowed same-sex couples to register
as partners and to claim pensions, social security and inheritance.
However, the law lagged behind the popular acceptance of gays
in the Netherlands, especially in Amsterdam, where the Homo
Monument is a popular tourist attraction and where gays annually
hold a raucous floating parade on the central canals watched
by tens of thousands of people. Van der Staaij, who opposed
the bill, warned Dutch gay couples could face problems in other
countries where homosexuality remains taboo or illegal.
The Dutch take the lead on other social issues besides gay rights.
Officials tolerate the use of small quantities of so-called
soft-drugs such as marijuana and hashish, allowing cafes to
sell cannabis joints and a cup of coffee. Prostitution is on
open display in well-regulated red-light districts, where scantly
clad women sit like merchandise in shop windows. Private television
stations often show late-night soft-porn movies.
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