Greece legalises same-sex marriage

4 months ago 20

Supporters of the Equality in Civil Marriage bill outside the Greek Parliament ahead of the vote on ThursdayImage source, Reuters

Image caption,

The legislation has been praised by LGBTQ organisations, but strongly opposed by the Orthodox Church

Greece has become the first Christian Orthodox-majority country to legalise same-sex marriage.

Same-sex couples will now also be legally allowed to adopt children after Thursday's vote.

Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said the new law would "boldly abolish a serious inequality".

But the legislation has divided the country, with fierce resistance being led by the powerful Greek Orthodox Church.

The bill needed a simple majority to pass through the 300-member parliament.

Mr Mitsotakis championed the bill but required the support of opposition parties to get it over the line, with dozens of MPs from his centre-right governing party opposed.

"People who have been invisible will finally be made visible around us, and with them, many children will finally find their rightful place," the prime minister told parliament during a debate ahead of the vote.

"The reform makes the lives of several of our fellow citizens better, without taking away anything from the lives of the many."

The vote has been hailed as historic by LGBTQ organisations in Greece.

Fifteen of the European Union's 27 members have already legalised same-sex marriage. It is permitted in 35 countries worldwide.

Greece has until now lagged behind some of its European neighbours, largely because of opposition from the Church.

It is the first country in southeast Europe to have marriage equality.

Supporters of the Church held rallies at Syntagma Square in Athens on Thursday. Many displayed banners, held crosses, read prayers and sang passages from the Bible.

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