The July 11, 2005 It is a day marked in red by the LGTBI collective in Spain, since the first homosexual wedding took place in our country. The link between Carlos Baturi and Emilio Menendezthe first two men who gave the yes I want legally, took place in Three songs and little more than a week after the Government of José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero carried out the regulations that allowed people of the same sex to marry.
The ceremony took place at the Tricantino City Hall and was officiated by a councilor from the United Left and with the presence of the historic socialist leader, Peter Zerolo. In court, more than 100 media gathered to illustrate a pioneering image.
With this, the protagonists of these lines were the first to marry under legal protection in our country, since in the 20th century they had married Elizabeth Sanchez Y Marcela Gracebut clandestinely. After them and today there are more than 50,000 people of the same sex who have married in our country according to data from the National Institute of Statistics (INE)
A law that changed the course of Spain
The equal marriage law went ahead in Spain with 187 votes in favor, 147 against and 4 abstentions and despite the refusal of PP and of Democratic Union of Catalonia. The then socialist president stressed in Parliament that the law was the result of “strict compliance with an electoral commitment” to build “a more decent country because a decent society is one that does not humiliate its members.” The regulations, he assured, “make us all better”.
Countries where same-sex marriage is authorized
Spain was the fourth country in approving same-sex marriage, second only to Netherlandswho had done it in 2001, Belgium (2003) and Canada (2005). Currently there are about thirty countries that allow two people of the same sex to marry.
- Germany
- Argentina
- Australia
- Austria
- Belgium
- Brazil
- Canada
- Chili
- Colombia
- Costa Rica
- Denmark
- Ecuador
- Spain
- USA
- Finland
- France
- Ireland
- Iceland
- Luxembourg
- malt
- Mexico (in your case, yes, in 27 states without resorting to protection)
- Norway
- New Zealand
- Netherlands
- Portugal
- United Kingdom
- South Africa
- Sweden
- Swiss
- Taiwan
Territories that punish homosexuality: the other side of the coin
On the other hand, there is still the B side of the coin, which has to do with intolerance and homophobic aggression and which reaches its maximum splendor in places where homosexuality is considered a crime. At some points, even, the death penalty is translated for gays, lesbians, anyone who is part of the LGTBI collective. today they are 12 countries that contemplate in their criminal code the maximum punishment for people who have sexual relations with people of the same sex:
- Mauritania
- Sudan
- Somalia
- Nigeria
- Saudi Arabia
- Afghanistan
- brunei
- qatar
- United Arab Emirates
- Iran
- Pakistan
- Yemen
Likewise, about 70 countries of the total that make up the The UN considers homosexuality to be criminal. In these places, mostly in Africa and Asia, punishments range from financial fines to a certain number of lashes, through jail sentences or other physical punishment.
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