Premium Content:

Thailand to recognise same-gender unions, calls for full marriage equality

Thailand’s government are making moves towards recognising civil unions for same-gender couples in a landmark move for the Asian nation.

- Advertisement -

Bangkok Post have reported that the Thai cabinet have finalised a draft on a civil partnership bill that will grant same-gender couples similar rights to married couples, deciding not to move forward on full marriage equality.

The bill would allow same-gender couples to adopt children, share property rights and provide protections for inheritance. The bill does not provide equal government benefits for same-gender couples, as opposed to married heterosexual spouses.

“The Civil Partnership Bill is an important step for Thai society in promoting equal rights and supporting the rights of same-sex couples to build families and live as partners,” government spokesperson Ratchada Thanadirek wrote on social media.

Many LGBTIQ+ advocates have welcomed the bill, but some have concerns the government would not extend the laws to encompass equal marriage rights.

“What’s in a name? It’s the content that matters,” Rainbow Sky Association of Thailand President Kittinan Daramadhaj told Reuters, arguing the bill essentially allows marriage by another name.

“‘Civil partnership’ shouldn’t distract from the fact that it’s about the legal registration of unions.”

Prominent Thai opposition party Move Forward is proposing a second bill which would go a step further and redefine marriage to include two people of any gender, and urging those seeking full marriage equality to contact their parliamentary representative in the house.

Should the bill pass, Thailand will follow Taiwan as the second Asian country to recognise same-gender relationships, with Taiwan legislating for marriage equality in 2019.

OIP Staff


Love OUTinPerth Campaign

Help support the publication of OUTinPerth by contributing to our
GoFundMe campaign.

 

 

Latest

Omar Apollo announces second album ‘God Said No’

The 14-track album delves through emotional wreckage at end of a whirlwind love affair. 

Kaz Cooke and Judith Lucy are touring this May & June

Author Kaz Cooke and comedian Judith Lucy have kicked off their Menopausal Night Out tour.

Bibliophile | ‘Ghost Cities’ tells two tales separated by centuries

What does the tale in which every book in the known Empire is destroyed – then re-created, page by page and book by book, all in the name of love and art tell us about our modern world?

Peppermint pays tribute to Janet Jackson by recreating her video

She nails every classic dance move.

Newsletter

Don't miss

Omar Apollo announces second album ‘God Said No’

The 14-track album delves through emotional wreckage at end of a whirlwind love affair. 

Kaz Cooke and Judith Lucy are touring this May & June

Author Kaz Cooke and comedian Judith Lucy have kicked off their Menopausal Night Out tour.

Bibliophile | ‘Ghost Cities’ tells two tales separated by centuries

What does the tale in which every book in the known Empire is destroyed – then re-created, page by page and book by book, all in the name of love and art tell us about our modern world?

Peppermint pays tribute to Janet Jackson by recreating her video

She nails every classic dance move.

Resources sector comes together to celebrate IDAHOBIT

Pride in Resources is a sector wide initiative to improve inclusion.

Omar Apollo announces second album ‘God Said No’

The 14-track album delves through emotional wreckage at end of a whirlwind love affair. 

Kaz Cooke and Judith Lucy are touring this May & June

Author Kaz Cooke and comedian Judith Lucy have kicked off their Menopausal Night Out tour.

Bibliophile | ‘Ghost Cities’ tells two tales separated by centuries

What does the tale in which every book in the known Empire is destroyed – then re-created, page by page and book by book, all in the name of love and art tell us about our modern world?