Same-sex marriage in Taiwan
Same-sex marriage in Taiwan has been discussed since the 2000s. Currently, Taiwan does not have any recognition of same-sex unions.
History
In August 2012, two women participated in what the media called Taiwan's first same-sex marriage ceremony.[1]
The Ministry of Justice's Department of Legal Affairs commissioned a study on legal recognitions of same-sex unions in Canada, Germany and France in 2012, but after pressure from critics, commissioned a further study for 2013 on the state of same-sex relationships in Asian countries for comparison.[2]
Registrations of same-sex couples
In May 2015, the special municipality of Kaohsiung announced a plan to allow same-sex couples to mark their partners in civil documents for reference purposes, although it would not be applicable to the healthcare sector; Taiwan LGBT Rights Advocacy, an NGO, criticized the plan as merely a measure to "make fun of" the community without having any substantive effect.[3][4]
On 17 June 2015, Taipei became the second special municipality in Taiwan to open registration for same-sex couples.[5]
In July 2015, Taichung announced it would be joining Taipei and Kaohsiung in recognizing same-sex partnerships. This made Taichung, the third special municipality to do so. Same-sex couples began to register their partnerships on 1 October 2015.[6][7]
On 28 December 2015, the city governments of Taipei and Kaohsiung announced an agreement to share their same-sex partnership registries with each other effective 1 January 2016, allowing for partnerships registered in one special municipality to be recognized in the other.[8] This marks the first time that same-sex partnerships have been recognized outside of single-municipality boundaries.
Activists protested on 18 December 2015 inside the Tainan City Council to lobby for a similar registry in Tainan.[9] On 27 January 2016, mayor William Lai announced that same-sex couples would be allowed to officially register their partnership in Tainan, becoming the next special municipality to do so.[10][11] Same-sex couples were able to begin registering on 1 February 2016.[12]
On 27 January 2016, New Taipei announced it would open registration for same-sex couples. New Taipei thus became the next special municipality in Taiwan to do so.[13] It took effect on 1 February 2016.
On 23 February 2016, mayor Twu Shiing-jer announced that Chiayi would be opening registration for same-sex couples, effective 1 March 2016. Therefore, Chiayi became the first of the three provincial cities of Taiwan to recognize same-sex couples. However they are more restrictions: both partners must be residents of the city and they will not be able to list their relationships on their household certificates.[14]
On 28 January 2016, Taoyuan's mayor declared that his special municipality is open to the possibility of a registry.[15] On 7 March 2016, Tang Hui-chen, director of the Department of Civil Affairs at the Taoyuan City Government, said that based on gender equality, basic human rights and respect for same-sex relationships, the government has decided to allow same-sex couples to register as same-sex partners to protect their rights.[16] It came into effect on 14 March 2016.[12] This made Taoyuan the sixth as well as the last special municipality in Taiwan to officially recognize same-sex couples.
On 18 March 2016, the Department of Civil Affairs at the Changhua County Government declared that based on respect and tolerance for same-sex couples, Changhua County had decided to open registration for same-sex couples.[17] Couples who wish to register must be at least twenty years old and one partner must be from the county. The first couple registered the day it came into effect, on 1 April 2016.[18]
Since 1 April 2016, same-sex couples living in Hsinchu County can go to any government office to register their relationship.[19] Hsinchu County along with Changhua County became on the same day the first two of the thirteen counties of Taiwan to officially register same-sex couples.
Same-sex marriage
In 2003, the executive branch of the Taiwan Government (Executive Yuan) proposed legislation granting marriages to same-sex couples under the Human Rights Basic Law; but the bill was rejected and was not passed into law because of the opposition of legislators in 2006.
President Ma Ying-jeou, Chairman of the governing Kuomintang (KMT), respected LGBT rights but said public support was needed before the government could approve the law, thus it has been stalled since.[20]
As of July 23, the special municipality of Taipei referred the question of constitutionality to the constitutional court for resolution.[21]
Su Tseng-chang, Chairman of the opposition Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) has expressed support for same-sex marriage.[22] Despite some division within the party on the issue, DPP's victorious presidential candidate for the January 2016 election, Tsai Ing-wen, announced her support of same-sex marriage in November 2015.[23]
On 23 October 2015, same-sex couples were included in Taoyuan's mass wedding ceremony despite same-sex marriage not been legal in Taiwan. This is the first time same-sex couples have been able to participate in this twice-yearly event.[24] Taipei followed suit one day later.[25] On 28 October 2015, the Taichung City Government announced that same-sex couples would be permitted to participate in next year's mass wedding ceremony.[26]
Proposed amendments to civil code
On 25 October 2013, a petition-initiated bill to revise the Civil Code to allow for same-sex couples to be eligible for marriage was introduced by 23 lawmakers from the DPP in the Legislative Yuan. It was immediately referred to the Yuan's Judicial Committee for review and possible first reading.[27]
On 22 December 2014, a proposed amendment to the Civil Code which would legalize same-sex marriage was due to go under review by the Judiciary Committee. If the amendment passes the committee stage it will then be voted on at the plenary session of the Legislative Yuan in 2015. The amendment, called the marriage equality amendment, would insert neutral terms into the Civil Code replacing ones that imply heterosexual marriage, effectively legalizing same-sex marriage. It would also allow same-sex couples to adopt children. Yu Mei-nu of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), who is the convener of the current legislative session, has expressed support for the amendment as have more than 20 other DPP lawmakers as well as two from the Taiwan Solidarity Union and one each from the Kuomintang and the People First Party.[28] Taiwan would become the first country in Asia to legalize same-sex marriage if the Civil Code is amended.
On 28 June 2015, a senior Ministry of Justice official stated same-sex marriage would remain illegal in Taiwan "for now". Deputy Minister of Justice Chen Ming-tang said "...in Taiwan, the issue of legalizing same-sex marriage remains extremely controversial...so we should not consider it for now". He added that while the Ministry of Justice opposes measures that would legalize same-sex marriages outright, it would support a more gradual approach, including offering better protection to same-sex couples under current laws, such as their rights to equal medical treatment and taxatiion.[29] The January 2016 Taiwanese general election resulted in a parliamentary majority for the Democratic Progressive Party, Taiwan's most gay friendly major party.
On 23 February 2016, the Cabinet's Referendum Review Committee rejected a referendum proposal put forward by the Faith and Hope League on the grounds that it failed to meet requirements. The proposal would have amended the Civil Code by stating that husband and wife relationships, consanguinity and the principles of human relations cannot be amended unless the public agrees via a referendum, thus making the legalization of same-sex marriage only possible through referendum. The committee voted 10-1 against the proposal. Chairman of the committee, Wang Kao-cheng, said it was rejected for two reasons: one, that the proposed was not a law, a legislative principle, important policy or constitutional amendment and therefore does not meet the requirement of the Referendum Act; and two, the proposal was about revising several provisions of the Civil Code, which does not meet the law’s requirement that a referendum should be about a single issue.[30]
Lawsuit
In March 2012, a gay couple Ching-Hsueh Chen (Nelson) 陳敬學 and Chih-Wei Kao (Johnson)高治瑋 applied to Taipei High Administrative Court to have their marriage recognized.[31] The first hearing took place on April 10, 2012. The couple was accompanied by their mothers and received the personal blessings from the judges for their love, although the judges said that wouldn't have any repercussions in their final ruling. The next hearing was set to take place a month later,[32] and the court was due to hand down a decision on December 20.[33] Instead, the court reneged on a ruling, opting to send the case to the Council of Grand Justices in the Judicial Yuan for a constitutional interpretation.[34] The case was then voluntarily withdrawn by the couple due to the hesitancy of the judiciary in taking on the case.
Public opinion
A poll of 6,439 Taiwanese adults released in April 2006 by the National Union of Taiwan Women's Association/Constitutional Reform Alliance concluded that 75% believe homosexual relations are acceptable, while 25% thought they were unacceptable.[35]
A poll released in August 2013 shows that 53% of Taiwanese support same-sex marriage, with 37% opposed. Among people aged between 20 and 29, support was at 78%. The main source of opposition was in the Taiwanese Christian community - only 25% of Christians supported same-sex marriage.[36]
Other polls suggest Taiwanese people are far more divided over same-sex marriage legalisation, with a November 2013 poll of 1,377 adults commissioned by cable news channel TVBS indicating the 45% oppose same-sex unions, while only 40% are in favour.[37]
An opinion poll released in December 2014 showed that 54 percent of Taiwanese people would support the legalization of same-sex marriage while 44.6 percent were not in favor.[38]
When a religious and conservative coalition opposed to same-sex marriage launched a petition for public support of their position, a staff editorial from the English-language China Post questioned the logic of the opponents' arguments and endorsed the legalization of same-sex marriage as "a huge step forward in the fight for universal equality akin to ending apartheid.[39] " The Taipei Times, similarly, questioned the logic and arguments of the anti-gay opposition.[40]
An opinion poll, carried out by the Ministry of Justice between August and October 2015, revealed that 71% of the Taiwanese population support same-sex marriage.[41]
See also
References
- ↑ "Two Buddhist brides wed in Taiwan". CNN.com. 2012-08-13. Retrieved 2014-04-05.
- ↑ Christie Chen (2012-12-15). "Ministry to commission further study on same-sex marriages". Focus Taiwan News Channel.
- ↑ Gay rights group says Kaohsiung decision 'makes fun of' them
- ↑ Gay groups seeking same leave, benefits as married couples
- ↑ Taipei opens registration for gay couples
- ↑ "Taichung opens registration for same-sex couples" (in Chinese). Taichung City Government. Retrieved 14 October 2015.
- ↑ Potts, Andrew (13 October 2015). "Taiwanese city becomes first to record gay relationships as next-of-kin in hospitals". Gay Star News.
- ↑ Taipei, Kaohsiung join hands on gay partnership registry
- ↑ Activists demand Tainan allow registration of same-sex partnerships
- ↑ Tainan to register gay couples
- ↑ Tainan City to start registering same-sex partnerships
- 1 2 "Taoyuan accepts household registration marking by same-sex couples". Focus Taiwan. 14 March 2016.
- ↑ "New Taipei City to start registering gay couples next week". Gay Star News. Retrieved 30 January 2016.
- ↑ "Chiayi to register gay couples". GayStarNews. 25 February 2016.
- ↑ (Chinese) 同性伴侶戶籍註記/南市將受理 桃園擬跟進
- ↑ "All Taiwan Municipalities To Recognize Same-Sex Relationships". The News Lens. 7 March 2016.
- ↑ "我們終於可以去登記了" (in Chinese). ETtoday. 18 March 2016.
- ↑ Hernandez, Vittorio (1 April 2016). "Taiwanese Same-Sex Pairs Move 1 Step Closer to Marriage Legalization as 8th Region Allows Registration of Gay Couples". Yibada.
- ↑ "酷新聞 伴侶註記再下一城" (in Chinese). Queer Watch. 8 April 2016.
- ↑ Taiwan to stage first same-sex buddhist wedding
- ↑ "Taipei City to seek constitutional interpretation on gay marriage". Focus Taiwan. 23 July 2015.
- ↑ Anna Leach (2012-10-31). "A progressive history of gay rights in Taiwan". Gay Star News. Retrieved 2014-04-05.
- ↑ Watch: Taiwan presidential frontrunner officially endorses marriage equality
- ↑ Williams, Joe (25 October 2015). "Same-sex couples participate in mass wedding ceremony for the first time". Pink News.
- ↑ "Same-sex couples marry at Taiwan mass wedding". The Telegraph. 24 October 2015.
- ↑ "Taichung's mass wedding to include gay couples next year: official". Focus Taiwan. 28 October 2015.
- ↑ Dennis Engbarth, Inter Press Service (Oct 31, 2013). "Taiwan lawmakers push marriage equality bill". Asia Times.
- ↑ Lii Wen (2014-12-21). "Gay marriage proposal set for review". Taipei Times. Retrieved 2014-12-21.
- ↑ "Same-sex marriage won't be legal in Taiwan 'for now,' says Justice Ministry". The China Post. 28 June 2015.
- ↑ "Anti-same-sex marriage referendum turned down". Taipei Times. 24 February 2016.
- ↑ "Gay Taiwanese couple make bid to be registered as same-sex household in landmark hearing". Pinknews.co.uk. 2012-03-26. Retrieved 2014-04-05.
- ↑ 'Blessed' gay men fight for marriage in court
- ↑ Archived December 2, 2012, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ Christie Chen, Huang Yi-han and Alex Jiang (2012-12-20). "Gay man vows not to give up fight for same-sex marriage rights (update)". Focus Taiwan News Channel.
- ↑ Taiwan Thinks Adultery Should Remain a Crime, Angus Reid Global Monitor, May 18, 2006
- ↑ Over half of Taiwanese support gay marriage: Survey
- ↑ Opposing rallies for and against homosexual marriage take to the streets of Taiwan, with parliament split over legislation
- ↑ "Gay marriage won't be legal in Taiwan 'for now': official (update - see final paragraph of article)". Focus Taiwan. 27 June 2015.
- ↑ The China Post news staff (September 21, 2013). "Same-sex marriage wouldn't bring about end of the world". The China Post.
- ↑ Staff Editorial (Sep 21, 2013). "EDITORIAL: Apocalyptic same-sex claptrap". Taipei Times.
- ↑ "Nearly two thirds of Taiwan supports marriage equality, survey finds". PinkNews. 30 November 2015.
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