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Monday, December 19, 2005

First Gay Weddings in Belfast

From The BBC:

The first set of civil partnership ceremonies for gay couples in the UK is due to be held in Northern Ireland. Two lesbian couples and a gay couple are due to exchange vows at Belfast City Hall, which already has 20 provisional bookings for the services. The new Civil Partnership Act provides same-sex couples with similar legal rights to married couples. The first ceremonies in Scotland will take place on Tuesday, and in England and Wales on Wednesday.

Two women, Shannon Sickles and Grainne Close, will be the first couple to exchange vows in a ceremony at Belfast City Hall at 1000 GMT. Both protesters and supporters are expected to be outside. The Reverend David McIlveen, of the Free Presbyterian Church - who will be among the protesters - said he was "very much opposed" to the "marriage in all but name" of gay couples. The bible described marriage as "a relationship between male and female for the bringing up of children", he told BBC News. "It is revealed as being an honourable relationship whereas the bible speaks of same sex relationships as being an abomination. You cannot reconcile the two."

But Maria Quirey from Northern Ireland's Lesbian Advocacy Service said the ceremonies would be welcomed by many. "I would remind people that we're talking about a minority, but quite a substantial minority and the British government have given the official figure now as 6% of the population," she said. "So in the north of Ireland, we're talking about 100,000 people - men and women." At least 1,200 ceremonies are confirmed as being scheduled across the UK already, according to figures from councils.

Campaigners say the law ends inequalities for same-sex couples. Since it came into force, couples have been able to legally register an intention to form a civil partnership with local councils. It means same-sex couples can have their relationships recognised in law for the first time. It also provides registered gay and lesbian couples with a number of legal rights and entitlements already held by heterosexual couples in civil marriages. But unlike marriages, the signing of the legal partnership papers does not need to happen in public. Last month, Lisburn City Council in Northern Ireland overturned its policy regarding gay and lesbian unions. The council had banned the use of its wedding room for same-sex civil partnership registrations, prompting gay activists to threaten legal action. After consulting lawyers, a council committee decided the ban should be lifted.

And so it begins……

6 comments:

JR said...

Congratulations to the people/government of the UK at being more civilized than the US. But then, in most cases you usually are. ;-)

CyberKitten said...

Apparently Elton John ties the knot on Wednesday here... So it's certainly going to get a lot of international coverage...

CyberKitten said...

Strangely Northern Ireland was the last part of the UK to de-criminalise Homosexuality (as recently as 1982 apparently) but fourgt long and hard to be the first place to hold Civil Ceremonies...

Juggling Mother said...

Ahh, don't they look sweet?

A much nicer couple than the oh so stereotypical Lesbian couple the TV homed in on!

I'm hoping I might get an invite to some kind of wedding now. I invited half the known world to mine & have any of them returned the favour? Have they ****!

CyberKitten said...

I actually got the picture from Google images rather than the BBC.. from a Gay wedding in Canada..

Haven't been to a wedding in ages.... I LIKE weddings....... they're often full of randy men and desparate women...

JR said...

CK said: "randy men and desperate women" LOL