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Cuba eliminates gay marriage from new constitution

AFP
Havant, UKUpdated: Dec 19, 2018, 08:15 AM IST

The marriages on Chinese waters would underline significant progress in gay rights because homosexuality was regarded as a mental disorder until 2001. Photograph:(DNA)

Story highlights

The commission had in July unveiled the first draft of Cuba's new constitution, to update a Soviet-era one, that including Article 68 redefining matrimony as gender neutral.

Cuba will leave out of its new constitution changes that would have paved the way for legal same-sex marriage, despite majority support in local assemblies, a government official said Tuesday. 

It was a surprising twist given public popular support has shown nationwide -- and earlier remarks from lawmakers in the Americas' only one-party Communist regime.

The measure would have changed the definition of parties in marriage from man and wife to "between two people."

But "the draft constitution will not define which parties enter into a marriage... So that is now out of constitutional reform discussions overall," Council of State secretary and drafting coordinator Homero Acosta was quoted as saying by state media.

The full draft constitution was put before neighbourhood and workplace assemblies for debate between August and November. The marriage issue was the one that drew the greatest attention.

"Article 68 was the one most discussed by the people in the popular consultation, in 66 per cent of the meetings (of citizen debate). Of the 192,408 opinions, 158,376 propose replacing the measure now in force with the one proposed," Cuba's National Assembly said on Twitter. 

In light of that, "the (text-drafting) Committee proposes deferring the definition of marriage to the draft constitution, as a way to respect all opinions."