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News > Latin America

IAHRCourt Urges Costa Rica to Legalize Same-sex Marriage

  • The court also recommended that these rights be ensured through temporary decrees while governments pursue permanent laws.

    The court also recommended that these rights be ensured through temporary decrees while governments pursue permanent laws. | Photo: Reuters

Published 9 January 2018
Opinion

A number of Latin American countries, including Costa Rica, do not allow same-sex marriage. However, that trend is changing.

A Latin American human rights court said Tuesday that countries in the region should legalize same-sex unions, endorsing a growing push for marriage equality despite opposition from the Roman Catholic Church.  In recent years same-sex couples have been allowed to marry in Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Uruguay and some parts of Mexico, despite church opposition.

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The Inter-American Court of Human Rights, based in Costa Rica’s capital San Jose, said that the countries it oversees should treat same-sex couples “without discrimination,” ensuring that they receive the same family and financial rights as heterosexual couples.

It also recommended that these rights be ensured through temporary decrees while governments pursue permanent laws.

The Court’s decision came in response to a petition submitted two years ago by Costa Rican President Luis Guillermo Solis, who had vowed to increase rights for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people in the majority Catholic country.

Costa Rica’s government celebrated the decision, saying that lawmakers would take steps to adopt the court’s criteria “in its totality.”

“The court ... reminds all states on the continent, including ours, of their obligation and historical debt toward this population,” Costa Rica’s vice president Ana Helena Chacon said at a press conference. 

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