AFP News, Frank
ZELLER, June 30, 2017
Greens party lawmakers cut a wedding cake at their parliament offices in Berlin after German lawmakers voted to legalise same-sex marriage |
Germany
legalised same-sex marriage Friday despite the personal objections of
Chancellor Angela Merkel, as the nation joined many other western democracies
in granting gay and lesbian couples full rights including adoption.
The
election-year bill was pushed by Merkel's leftist rivals, who pounced on
comments she made early this week suggesting a policy U-turn -- a manoeuvre
that left her conservative lawmakers fuming.
Merkel
allowed MPs of her Christian Democratic Party (CDU) to vote their conscience on
the bill rather than follow the party line, which has for years been to oppose
the reform.
The gay
marriage law passed by a margin of 393 to 226 on the parliament's last day
before the summer recess -- a moment jubilant supporters celebrated by throwing
confetti in the Bundestag.
The reform
reflects German public opinion, with polls showing three-quarters support
granting full marriage rights to same-sex couples, who have since 2001 been
allowed to live in so-called civil unions.
But Merkel
said she had voted against the legalisation out of her personal conviction.
"To
me, marriage as defined in the German constitution means the marriage between
husband and wife, and that is why I voted against the law today," she
said.
She did
however say that her thinking had changed on the question of child adoption by
same-sex couples, which she long opposed.
"I
have thought a lot about the matter of child welfare and have now... have come
to the conviction that same-sex couples should be able to jointly adopt
children," she said.
The German
legal code will change to say "marriage is entered into for life by two
people of different or the same sex".
The upper
house has already approved the measure, which is expected to enter into force
before the end of the year.
Renate
Kuenast of the Greens party, which has pushed for decades for LGBT rights,
quipped cheerfully: "I would advise all registry offices in the country to
boost staff numbers."
'Warms
the heart'
"Germany
voted for love," said the Lesbian and Gay Federation in Germany, celebrating
the "historic day... for a more just and democratic society".
"It's
a real recognition, so it warms the heart," said French engineer
Christophe Tetu, 46, who lives in Berlin with his partner Timo Strobel, 51.
"We're
thinking about having a party, getting married and using our new rights to
protect our relationship," he told AFP.
Strobel
said he too was "overjoyed" that the couple would be able to show
family and friends "that we are committed to each other, that we will stay
together and we will spend our lives together".
The rapid
series of events kicked off with an on-stage interview Merkel gave Monday to
women's magazine Brigitte, in which an audience member asked her: "When
can I call my boyfriend my husband if I want to marry him?"
Merkel, who
had long opposed gay marriage with adoption rights, replied that she had
changed her mind after meeting a lesbian couple who lovingly cared for eight
foster children.
She said
she favoured an eventual vote when all lawmakers could follow their conscience
rather than a party line.
'Breach
of trust'
Many read
the surprising comments as a move to rob opposition parties of a key campaign
issue before September 24 elections.
Merkel's
current coalition partners, the Social Democrats (SPD), had declared a gay
marriage law a red-line demand and precondition for any future alliance -- as
had the Greens, the far-left Linke and the pro-business Free Democrats.
On Tuesday,
after much buzz on social media, the SPD leader and candidate for the chancellory
Martin Schulz took Merkel at her word and broke coalition ranks to call for an
immediate vote.
The CDU
slammed the tactic as a "breach of trust" after four years of joint
rule with the SPD.
During
Friday's emotional parliamentary debate, one SPD lawmaker angrily criticised
Merkel, accusing her of "pathetic and embarrassing" meandering on the
issue.
"Mrs
Merkel, thanks for nothing!" said Johannes Kahrs, charging that she had
blocked progress on gay and lesbian rights for years.
He
characterised her Monday-night comments as a "Schabowski moment" -- a
reference to the communist East German official Guenter Schabowski, whose
fumbling comments at a 1989 press conference sparked the mass rush to border
crossings that brought down the Berlin Wall.
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