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Switzerland Votes To Make Same-Sex Marriage Legal by Near Two-Thirds Majority

Swiss justice minister Karin Keller-Sutter said the new rules would likely come into force on July 1 next year.
Silke Koltrowitz
Sep 27 2021
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Swiss justice minister Karin Keller-Sutter said the new rules would likely come into force on July 1 next year.
FILE PHOTO: Posters are pictured before a vote on same sex marriage in Geneva, Switzerland, September 23, 2021. Poster reads : "Love without privilege, yes to marriage for all". REUTERS/Denis Balibouse
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Zurich: Switzerland agreed to legalise civil marriage and the right to adopt children for same-sex couples by a nearly two-thirds majority in a referendum on Sunday, making it one of the last countries in Western Europe to legalise gay marriage.

According to results provided by the Swiss federal chancellery, 64.1% of voters voted in favour of same-sex marriage in the nationwide referendum that was conducted under Switzerland's system of direct democracy.

"We are very happy and relieved," said Antonia Hauswirth of the national committee "Marriage for All", adding supporters would celebrate in Switzerland's capital Bern on Sunday.

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Amnesty International said in a statement that opening civil marriage to same-sex couples was a "milestone for equality".

Also read: Why the International Law Angle Is Missing From Cases on Same-Sex Marriages

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However, Monika Rueegger of Switzerland's right-wing Swiss People's Party (SVP) and member of the referendum committee "No to Marriage for All" said she was disappointed.

"This was not about love and feelings, it was about children's welfare. Children and fathers are the losers here," she told Reuters.

The amended law will make it possible for same-sex couples to get married, and to adopt children unrelated to them. Married lesbian couples will also be allowed to have children through sperm donation, currently legal only for married heterosexual couples.

It will also make it easier for foreign spouses of a Swiss individual to get citizenship.

Swiss justice minister Karin Keller-Sutter told a media briefing the new rules would likely come into force on July 1 next year.

In a separate referendum, 64.9% of Swiss voters rejected a proposal to introduce a capital gains tax.

(Reuters)

This article went live on September twenty-seventh, two thousand twenty one, at nine minutes past six in the evening.

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