Same-sex marriage in Ecuador
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (September 2007) |
Same-sex marriages are currently illegal in Ecuador. However, due to possible constitutional changes, it appears Ecuador would legalize some form of same-sex unions if the new constitutional proposal is passed by voters in 2008. [1]
[edit] Background
Ecuadorians are currently in the midst of rewriting their constitution. At present a commission of jurists are still creating the charter document. A vote took place on Sunday, September 30th and current President Rafael Correa (a socialist) claimed vicotry.
Dr. Medardo Mora, president of the Commission of Jurists of the National Council of Superior Education, has explicitly stated that abortion would become legal citing the need for the separation of church and state, something already granted under the previous Constitution. As reported in the Ecuadorian newspaper El Comercio, Julio César Trujillo, another member of the Commission stated his support for same-sex marriage. "Regarding unions between people, he said that the current constitution is very general and somewhat restrictive, because regarding legal unions it only speaks of free men and women."
Ecuador's new leftist president, Rafael Correa, has openly stated that he wants the document to allow homosexual unions. "There should be a certain level of security" for homosexual unions, he told the press recently, "but without going as far as marriage." He also stated his support for allowing homosexuals in the military, saying that "all discrimination should be eliminated."
"Every person has dignity, in other words, one must respect a person independently of their sexual preference," Correa stated. "Be careful on denying employment to someone based on their sexual preference, this is discrimination, that is unconstitutional."
"Let it be clear that the profoundly humanistic position of this government is to respect the intrinsic dignity of everyone, of every human being, independent of their creed, race, sexual preference, and that [the government] will seek to grant certain guarantees to stable same-sex unions, but without ever arriving at the point of marriage."
"Now, if one dies, the other cannot inherit anything, for this reason we will give certain guarantees to the stable gay couples, but matrimony will continue to be reserved for a man, a woman and the family."

