Oslo - A new common marriage law that will allow same-sex
couples in Norway to marry won broad approval Wednesday in
parliament, and was welcomed with applause and cheers from the public
gallery.
'It is a historic day,' Gunn Karin Gjul of the Labour Party said
during the debate.
Gjul, a member of the parliamentary committee on family affairs,
compared the passing of the bill to 'universal suffrage and the
gender equality law.'
The amended marriage law was criticized by the opposition
Christian Democrats and populist Progress Party, who voted against.
During the debate, members of both parties said they especially
opposed the legislation giving lesbian couples the same access to
'medically assisted reproduction' as heterosexual couples.
Peaceful protests were also staged outside parliament earlier
Wednesday over the proposed changes.
Christian Democrat leader Dagfinn Hoybraten called the bill 'a big
experiment,' adding that while his party rejected discrimination
against homosexuals it wanted to protect the rights of children.
Children conceived with artificial insemination risk not knowing
their biological parents, which would violate the United Nations
Children's Convention, critics said.
The law was backed by the ruling red-green coalition of the Labour
Party, the Centre Party and the Socialist Left Party as well as
members of the opposition Conservatives and Liberals.
Socialist Left Party leader Kristin Halvorsen, also finance
minister, said the bill was for 'equal rights' and against all forms
of discrimination.
The amended law would also allow - but not oblige - the Church of
Norway and registered religious communities to bless same-sex
marriages.
Same-sex couples who have registered their partnership may convert
the partnership into marriage, the Ministry of Children and Equality
said.
The bill also widens the scope for adoption for same-sex couples.
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