Yahoo – AFP, 9 June 2014
The Hong Kong government has refused to allow same-sex couples to marry at the British consulate in the city, UK officials said Monday, prompting heavy criticism from gay and lesbian rights groups.
![]() |
Photo taken
in November 2012 shows a Gay Pride parade in Hong Kong.
(Photo: Philippe Lopez/AFP/File)
|
The Hong Kong government has refused to allow same-sex couples to marry at the British consulate in the city, UK officials said Monday, prompting heavy criticism from gay and lesbian rights groups.
The British
Foreign and Commonwealth Office announced last week that it would allow its
overseas missions to perform same-sex marriages for Britons and their partners
in countries where it is illegal under local laws.
However the
service, which coincides with legislation to permit same-sex marriages taking
effect in the UK, was contingent on local authorities granting their approval.
Hong Kong's
refusal to allow the marriages came despite countries often criticised for
their gay rights records including China, Russia and Azerbaijian, as well as
the deeply Catholic Philippines, giving their consent.
"Before
the UK legislation that governs same-sex marriages was implemented earlier this
month, we asked the Hong Kong Government for their agreement to perform such
ceremonies here," a spokesperson for the British Consulate General said in
statement emailed to AFP.
"Unfortunately, the Hong Kong government has raised an objection to the solemnisation of same sex marriages in Hong Kong," the statement said.
"Unfortunately, the Hong Kong government has raised an objection to the solemnisation of same sex marriages in Hong Kong," the statement said.
Hong Kong's
LGBT activists expressed outrage at their government's decision.
Nigel
Collett, secretary for gay rights group Pink Alliance, accused the government
of "denying any form of increase of rights" for homosexuals in the
city.
"Hong Kong
is making a fool of itself while Moscow and Beijing have taken a more sensible
view for something that does not concern their citizens," he told AFP.
Representatives
for the Hong Kong government were not immediately available to comment.
Same-sex
marriages and civil partnerships are illegal in socially conservative Hong
Kong, where homosexuality was only decriminalised in 1991.
In 2012, a
local tycoon offered a $65 million "marriage bounty" to any man who
could win the heart of his lesbian daughter.
Cecil Chao
later increased the sum to $130 million but withdrew the offer earlier this
year at the request of his daughter Gigi, who asked her father to treat her and
her partner as a "normal, dignified human being".
More than
20 countries where same-sex marriage is not legal have agreed to allow their
British consulates to perform the marriages, including Australia, Japan, Chile,
Bolivia and Serbia.



No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.