Author Archives: Andreas R. Ziegler

Lesbian mother of stateless baby takes citizenship fight to top EU court

Lesbian mother of stateless baby takes citizenship fight to top EU court

A baby left without a nationality after she was born in Spain to a same-sex couple from Bulgaria and Gibraltar is at the centre of a test case to be heard by the European Unionโ€™s top court on Tuesday (9 February).

Lawyers say Bulgaria has put one-year-old โ€œBaby Sโ€ at risk of prolonged statelessness after refusing to provide a birth certificate and citizenship because of discrimination towards her parentsโ€™ sexual orientation.

The hearing at the Luxembourg-based court is being seen as an important test case for many other so-called โ€œrainbow familiesโ€ in Europe who face similar dilemmas.

Experts on statelessness say if โ€œBaby Sโ€ cannot acquire citizenship she may not be able to go to school, access healthcare and state benefits, or get jobs later in life.

Her parents, who live near Barcelona, have not yet been able to introduce their daughter to their families abroad because they cannot get her a passport.

After she was born in December 2019, โ€œBaby Sโ€ received a birth certificate in Spain listing both her mothers.

However when her Bulgarian mother, who uses the pseudonym Kalina, requested a Bulgarian birth certificate for her daughter so she could apply for citizenship, she said officials told her a baby could not have two mothers.

Bulgariaโ€™s constitution defines marriage as the union of a man and a woman.

โ€œItโ€™s caused us a lot of upset. This discrimination feels very personal and has shocked us,โ€ Kalina told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

โ€œI want to tell (the court) Iโ€™m her mother no matter which country Iโ€™m in. Itโ€™s very unfortunate that I can be her mother in Spainโ€ฆbut I canโ€™t be her mother in my own home country.โ€

The couple cannot obtain Spanish citizenship for their daughter as neither of them is a Spanish national.

Gibraltar is a British Overseas Territory located on Spainโ€™s southern tip but British laws mean Kalinaโ€™s wife cannot pass on her British citizenship as she acquired it by descent.

Kalinaโ€™s lawyer will urge the Court of Justice of the European Union to request Bulgaria provide โ€œBaby Sโ€ with a birth certificate and nationality.

The Luxembourg-based court, which ensures EU countries comply with the blocโ€™s laws, is also considering a similar case where Poland refused to issue a birth certificate for a child born in Spain to Polish and Irish mothers.

โ€œThis ruling will be important for many people,โ€ said Kalinaโ€™s lawyer Denitsa Lyubenova.

โ€œThere are a lot of same-sex couples in Europe in the same position, whose children are at risk of statelessness because EU member states in central and eastern Europe do not recognise their family status.โ€

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has said she will push for mutual recognition of family relations in the European Union under a new strategy to strengthen LGBT+ rights.

โ€œIf you are (a) parent in one country, you are (a) parent in every country,โ€ she told the European Parliament last year.

Read: https://www.euractiv.com/section/non-discrimination/news/lesbian-mother-of-stateless-baby-takes-citizenship-fight-to-top-eu-court

Czech Constitutional Court: No Recognition of Foreign Adoption by Same-Sex Couples

Czech Constitutional Court: No Recognition of Foreign Adoption by Same-Sex Couples

Barbara Havelkovรก & Terezie Bokovรก – 29th January 2021 Children’s Rights | Equality and Non-Discrimination | Relationship Rights | Right to Privacy

The recent decision of the Czech Constitutional Court (โ€˜CCCโ€™), Pl. รšS 6/20, against allowing recognition of foreign adoption decisions in Czechia is harmful in outcome and evasive and formalistic in its reasoning.

Read: https://ohrh.law.ox.ac.uk/czech-constitutional-court-no-recognition-of-foreign-adoption-by-same-sex-couples

Angola law prohibiting discrimination based on sexual orientation takes effect

Angola law prohibiting discrimination based on sexual orientation takes effect

Bildergebnis fรผr Angola lgbt

Angolaโ€™s revised penal code went into effect Wednesday, not only decriminalizing same-sex relationships, but also banning discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.

The penal code was approved by the Angolan parliament in 2019, but was not signed by the president into law until November 2020, to take effect in February of this year. It was the first revision of the penal code since Angola gained independence from Portugal in 1975. The original penal code contained holdovers from the colonial era, including banning โ€œvices against nature,โ€ widely understood to mean homosexuality. That provision has been removed in the revised code.

The new code lists sexual orientation as a protected class. Angolans cannot be fired because of their sexual orientation, nor can they be refused goods, services, or any other economic activity because of their sexual orientation. Violators of the prohibition could be subject to up to two years in prison. The code also adds penalties for those who defame or otherwise insult the honor of a person because of their sexual orientation.

The news of the penal code taking effect was met with celebrations online. French politician and noted LGBTQ activist Jean-Luc Romero-Michel called it a โ€œgreat step forward for human rights which should inspire others.โ€

The post Angola law prohibiting discrimination based on sexual orientation takes effect appeared first on JURIST – News – Legal News & Commentary.

Join us online: ยซ LGBT at work : quelques rรฉsultats d’une recherche sur les parcours professionnels de personnes LGBT dans le monde du travail ยป, JEUDI 4 MARS | 12h15 – 13h45 | en ligne (ZOOM)

Join us online: ยซ LGBT at work : quelques rรฉsultats d’une recherche sur les parcours professionnels de personnes LGBT dans le monde du travail ยป, JEUDI 4 MARS | 12h15 – 13h45 | en ligne (ZOOM)

JEUDI 4 MARS | 12h15 – 13h45 | en ligne (ZOOM)

Lorena Parini

ยซ LGBT at work : quelques rรฉsultats d’une recherche sur les parcours professionnels de personnes LGBT dans le monde du travail ยป

Sรฉance externe

COORDINATION

Charlรจne Calderaro et Muriel Bruttin

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USA: New Biden executive action bolsters support for LGBTQI+ rights around the world

USA: New Biden executive action bolsters support for LGBTQI+ rights around the world

Bildergebnis fรผr biden lgbt
Yesterday, President Biden issued a memorandum proclaiming the administrationโ€™s support for LGBTQI+ people and rights globally. LGBT people continue to face violence, stigma, and discrimination in many parts of the world despite advances in some countries and regions.

A 2019 Williams Institute study that measured changes in acceptance of LGBT people over time across 174 countries found the average level of acceptance has increased since 1981, but progress has been polarized. Other research found a strong association between social acceptance of LGBT people and the existence of laws that recognize and protect the rights of LGBT people. In addition, countries that offer more rights to LGB people enjoy significantly higher per capita GDP than those who do not.

France: Pourquoi a-t-il fallu un #MeTooGay pour qu’รฉmerge vraiment la parole des hommes homosexuels victimes de viol ?

France: Pourquoi a-t-il fallu un #MeTooGay pour qu’รฉmerge vraiment la parole des hommes homosexuels victimes de viol ?

Un drapeau arc-en-ciel lors de la Pride 2020 ร  Paris. (Photo d'illustration) (AMAURY CORNU / AFP)
Un drapeau arc-en-ciel lors de la Pride 2020 ร  Paris. (Photo d’illustration) (AMAURY CORNU / AFP)

La stigmatisation de l’homosexualitรฉ et la difficultรฉ de faire souvent partie de la mรชme communautรฉ que son agresseur peuvent expliquer que ce #MeTooGay รฉclate plus tardivement, analyse le sociologue Sรฉbastien Chauvin. Article rรฉdigรฉ par

Propos recueillis par – Louis Boy France Tรฉlรฉvisions Publiรฉ le 22/01/2021 19:06 Mis ร  jour le 22/01/2021 19:10 Temps de lecture : 4 min.

Les rรฉcits, glaรงants, se multiplient. Le mot clรฉ #MeTooGay s’est installรฉ, depuis la nuit du jeudi 21 au vendredi 22 janvier, parmi les plus utilisรฉs en France sur Twitter, portรฉ par des centaines d’hommes homosexuels tรฉmoignant des viols et des agressions sexuelles dont ils ont รฉtรฉ victimes.

Le hashtag est nรฉ en rรฉaction aux messages d’un utilisateur accusant Maxime Cochard, รฉlu PCF au Conseil de Paris, et son conjoint de viol et d’agression sexuelle. Une vague de tรฉmoignages inรฉdite au sein de la communautรฉ gay, mรชme au plus fort du mouvement #MeToo en 2017. Sรฉbastien Chauvin, professeur associรฉ ร  l’Institut de sciences sociales de l’universitรฉ de Lausanne (Suisse) et notamment coauteur de Sociologie de l’homosexualitรฉ, analyse pour franceinfo le sens de son รฉmergence.

Franceinfo : Y avait-il besoin d’un hashtag spรฉcifique pour que la parole des victimes gay de violences sexuelles se libรจre et soit entendue comme elle l’est depuis jeudi soir ?

Sรฉbastien Chauvin : Oui, on vient d’en faire l’expรฉrience : il a suffi que le hashtag apparaisse et les tรฉmoignages ont affluรฉ. ร‡a montre qu’il y avait un besoin. Dรจs le dรฉbut de #MeToo, il y a eu des tรฉmoignages d’hommes, mais ils ont รฉtรฉ diluรฉs dans ce mouvement plus gรฉnรฉral. Rรฉcemment, des tรฉmoignages ont aussi รฉmergรฉ sur #MeTooInceste, ce qui correspondait d’ailleurs ร  une spรฉcificitรฉ des violences sexuelles commises sur des hommes : selon les travaux de l’Ined, la majoritรฉ d’entre elles ont รฉtรฉ subies avant 18 ans. Ce contexte peut expliquer que la question ait mis un certain temps ร  prendre une forme autonome.

Au moment de #MeToo, la question du consentement a aussi pu รชtre reรงue comme une question hรฉtรฉrosexuelle. Implicitement, souvent, on maintenait une asymรฉtrie de genre, on parlait des hommes qui devaient demander le consentement ร  des femmes. Cela a pu empรชcher de problรฉmatiser cette question entre les hommes.

Cependant, le #MeTooGay a en commun avec #MeToo de parler de violences qui ont un lien avec le patriarcat. Et les tรฉmoignages des femmes ont aussi appris aux hommes ร  voir les violences dont ils รฉtaient victimes comme patriarcales. L’immense majoritรฉ des hommes victimes de violences sexuelles sont victimes d’autres hommes.

Est-ce que ce mouvement au sein de la communautรฉ gay reflรจte aussi des spรฉcificitรฉs de violences sexuelles dont ils sont victimes ?

La stigmatisation de l’homosexualitรฉ peut jouer un rรดle dans la difficultรฉ ร  faire รฉmerger la parole des victimes. Pour beaucoup de gens qui sont dans le “placard” ร  cause de cette stigmatisation, porter plainte, c’est aussi faire son coming out. Et le faire auprรจs d’une police qui peut, parfois, ne pas prendre au sรฉrieux une agression commise ร  l’intรฉrieur d’un milieu “altรฉrisรฉ”.

C’est aussi un milieu qui a pu se construire autour du droit ร  la sexualitรฉ, de sa valorisation, et de l’idรฉe qu’elle pouvait รชtre une forme de rรฉsistance. Cela a pu induire une forme de culpabilitรฉ chez certaines victimes. De mรชme que le fait que, contrairement au #MeToo des femmes, dans le #MeTooGay, la communautรฉ gay n’est pas seulement le groupe des victimes. Il est รฉvidemment trรจs difficile pour les femmes de porter plainte, pour de multiples raisons. Mais pour les hommes gay, une spรฉcificitรฉ est qu’il n’y avait pas de groupe clairement dรฉsignรฉ auprรจs duquel trouver un appui.

Pourquoi ce hashtag รฉmerge-t-il maintenant, en rรฉaction ร  cette affaire [l’accusation de viol portรฉe contre l’รฉlu parisien Maxime Cochard et son compagnon] ? 

Il y a toujours une part de hasard, mais le fait que รงa naisse d’une affaire concernant un responsable politique de gauche n’est pas anodin. Non pas parce que รงa se passerait davantage ร  gauche, mais parce qu’on y trouve l’รฉcosystรจme nรฉcessaire pour entraรฎner ces rรฉactions. Comme pour #MeToo [#BalanceTonPorc en France] : rappelons-nous que cela avait รฉtรฉ prรฉcรฉdรฉ, chez nous, par l’affaire Denis Baupin [du nom d’un responsable d’EELV accusรฉ en 2016 de harcรจlement et d’agressions sexuelles par huit รฉlues ou collaboratrices du parti]. Si c’รฉtait arrivรฉ en dehors de ce rรฉseau militant, si les accusations avaient visรฉ quelqu’un du show business ou un youtubeur, comme c’est d’ailleurs dรฉjร  arrivรฉ, cela n’aurait peut-รชtre pas entraรฎnรฉ un tel mouvement. 

Bien sรปr, il est nรฉ entre des gens jeunes, qui sont sur Twitter, beaucoup aussi de journalistes. Mais cela peut s’รฉlargir, #MeToo aussi avait commencรฉ comme รงa. La presse internationale est dรฉjร  en train de faire des articles sur ce phรฉnomรจne franรงais, et mon intuition est que dans 48 heures, il sera mondial.

Qu’est-ce que cette vague de tรฉmoignages peut contribuer ร  changer, pour les victimes et dans les mentalitรฉs des agresseurs ?

Je pense que, comme dans le #MeToo hรฉtรฉro, beaucoup de gens qui savent qu’ils ont subi des choses violentes, mais qui n’avaient pas mis de termes prรฉcis dessus, peuvent avoir cette prise de conscience. Et un #MeTooGay peut changer la perception sociale de la parole des homosexuels victimes. Cela permettrait d’รฉviter, par exemple, la dรฉsinvolture avec laquelle on a rรฉcemment mis en doute le tรฉmoignage de l’รฉcrivain Edouard Louis, dont ce qui frappe, au miroir des tรฉmoignages qu’on lit depuis jeudi soir, est la terrible banalitรฉ [l’homme accusรฉ par le romancier a รฉtรฉ relaxรฉ en dรฉcembre 2020, le parquet a fait appel].

Je crois aussi que les mentalitรฉs peuvent changer, mais je ne sais pas si ce sera le cas. Il est quand mรชme assez clair qu’il existe une diffรฉrence gรฉnรฉrationnelle, que l’on a aussi vu lors de #MeToo. On parle de faits qu’une partie des gรฉnรฉrations antรฉrieures avaient peut-รชtre trop classรฉs dans une “zone grise”, et que les plus jeunes ne voient pas de la mรชmeย faรงon. Cela va faire rรฉflรฉchir, mais il est possible que ce clivage persiste.

Source: https://www.francetvinfo.fr/societe/harcelement-sexuel/pourquoi-a-t-il-fallu-un-metoogay-pour-qu-emerge-vraiment-la-parole-des-hommes-homosexuels-victimes-de-viol_4268133.html

USA: New York governor signs legislation repealing state anti-loitering law that impacted trans women

USA: New York governor signs legislation repealing state anti-loitering law that impacted trans women

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo signed legislation Tuesday that repeals a section of the New York penal law that led to arbitrary and discriminatory policing of transgender women and cisgender women of color.

Section 240.37 of the New York penal law, sometimes known as the โ€œwalking while transโ€ ban, prohibited loitering โ€œfor the purpose of engaging in a prostitution offense.โ€ The law was originally passed in 1976. While the purpose was to prohibit loitering for the purpose of prostitution, it has largely been used to target law-abiding transgender and cisgender women of color.

According to the lead sponsor of the bill, New York State Senator Brad Hoylman, data from the New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services showed that 91 percent of people arrested under the statute were Black and Latinx. Of those, 80 percent identified as women.

Senate Bill 1351, signed Tuesday, repealed section 240.37. It also amended section 230.01, which deals with affirmative defenses for prostitution.

On signing the legislation, Cuomo stated:

COVID exposed low tide in America and the โ€œwalking while transโ€ policy is one example of the ugly undercurrents of injustices that transgender New Yorkersโ€”especially those of colorโ€”face simply for walking down the street. For too long trans people have been unfairly targeted and disproportionately policed for innocent, lawful conduct based solely on their appearance. Repealing the archaic โ€œwalking while transโ€ ban is a critical step toward reforming our policing system and reducing the harassment and criminalization transgender people face simply for being themselves.

The post New York governor signs legislation repealing state anti-loitering law that impacted trans women appeared first on JURIST – News – Legal News & Commentary.

ILGA: โ€œIf You Are Parent in One Country, You Are Parent in Every Countryโ€: But still today a child can be stateless in the EU just because it has two mothers

ILGA: โ€œIf You Are Parent in One Country, You Are Parent in Every Countryโ€: But still today a child can be stateless in the EU just because it has two mothers

Read: https://ilga-europe.org/blog/if-you-are-parent-one-country-you-are-parent-every-country-still-today-child-can-be-stateless

A baby born to two mothers, one from Gibraltar and one from Bulgaria, has become a test case at the European Court of Justice for the freedom of movement of rainbow families in the EU. Read on and find out how to join our campaign for parents without borders!


Born in the EU, Sara is the daughter of a Gibraltar-born mother and a Bulgarian mother. Under EU rules, baby Sara is a Bulgarian citizen. However, Bulgarian authorities do not believe that a child can have two mothers and have denied citizenship to Sara, putting her at risk of statelessness. The Court of Justice of the European Union in Luxembourg will hear Baby Saraโ€™s case on February 9. It is a unique opportunity for the court to take a stand in support of rainbow families and their right to free movement.

โ€œIf you are parent in one country, you are parent in every countryโ€ said Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission, in her address of the State of the Union in September 2020. However, this is not the reality for many rainbow families, and it has certainly not been the case for baby Sara and her parents so far. Through this case, the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) has the chance to help make President von der Leyenโ€™s words a reality for all families in the EU.

The story of Baby Saraโ€™s family

Kalina* and Jane* got married in 2018 in Gibraltar, Janeโ€™s birthplace. Kalina is from Bulgaria, a member state of the EU. Because it is part of the United Kingdom, since January 1 of this year, Gibraltar has exited the EU.

Baby Sara was born in December 2019 in Spain. Like Bulgaria, Spain is a member state of the EU. Saraโ€™s birth certificate lists Kalina and Jane as her mothers. However, under the national laws of Spain and the UK, Sara could not become a citizen in either country. Not in Spain, because neither of her mothers have Spanish citizenship, and not in the UK, as Jane, who was born of British parentage in Gibraltar, could not transfer British citizenship to Baby Sara, who was born outside the UK.

Therefore, Kalina requested Bulgarian citizenship for their child. Bulgarian authorities rejected the application, arguing that a baby cannot have two mothers, and refused to issue a birth certificate in which the parents are two persons of the same sex. In Bulgaria, same-sex marriages are not allowed. As a result, Sara has no personal identification documents and cannot leave Spain, where the family currently lives.

In the long run, Sara is at risk of statelessness. Without documents, she will not be able to attend school. Kalina lodged a claim against Bulgarian authorities before the Administrative Court of Sofia, which in turn referred four questions to the CJEU asking for clarification. The CJEU will hold a hearing in this case on February 9 by the Grand Chamber, composed of 15 judges.

Why the court should judge in Baby Saraโ€™s favour

โ€œAll EU citizens and their families have the right to enjoy freedom of movement,โ€ says Arpi Avetisyan, Head of litigations at ILGA-Europe. โ€œArticle 21 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union states that all EU citizens and their family members have the right to move and reside freely within the EU. Through this case, the CJEU has the opportunity to clarify that parentage established in one member state must be recognised across the EU.

โ€œIn 2018, the CJEU delivered a judgement on the Coman case, saying that the definition of โ€˜spouseโ€™ in EU law on freedom of movement includes same-sex couples. Therefore, โ€œarguments on โ€˜constitutional identityโ€™, namely that Bulgaria does not recognise rainbow families, cannot justify a violation of EU law.โ€

Severe obstacles for children

Unfortunately, Saraโ€™s situation is not an isolated case. According to Arpi, it is representative of what many rainbow families experience across the EU. โ€œParents cease to exist when moving from one EU country to another, where birth certificates from another member state are not recognised. These situations create severe obstacles for children in exercising the rights to which they are entitled under European and international law. Among others, the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) is violated, restricting access to education, healthcare, and social security.โ€

The CJEU must clarify that if you are a parent in one EU country, you are a parent in every EU country. Help make this a reality by joining our #parentswithoutborders campaign!

Share this gif on your social media, with the message:

Authorities in #Bulgaria are not recognising the valid #EU birth cert of the child of a same sex couple. On Feb 9 the CJEU must clarify that if you are a parent in one EU country, you are a parent in every EU country #ParentsWithoutBorders

*Names have been changed Tags: rainbow familiesBulgariaUrsula von der LeyenEuropean Commission

Latvia: Discussion on Defining the Modern Family

Latvia: Discussion on Defining the Modern Family

Kalvis Engฤซzers – https://verfassungsblog.de/defining-the-modern-family/

In November 2020, the Constitutional Court of Latvia recognised that the Constitution of Latvia (Satversme) obliges the state to protect all families, including those established by same-sex couples. The judgement was met with considerable political backlash and at the beginning of January prompted the rightโ€‘wing party Nacionฤlฤ Apvienฤซba to submit an initiative to amend the Satversme with a new, excluding definition of family. Perhaps more worrisome is how the amendment and the associated campaign openly attack the authority of the Constitutional Court.

The essence of the amendments

On 7 January 2021, Nacionฤlฤ Apvienฤซba (hereinafter NA) โ€“ one of the governing parties โ€“ submitted to the Parliament of Latvia (the Saeima) draft amendments (hereinafter draft law) to Article 110 of the Satversme, which provides for the following wording:

โ€œThe state protects and promotes marriage โ€“ a union between a man and a woman, a family based on marriage, blood relation or adoption, the rights of parents and children, including the right to grow up in a family established by a mother (woman) and a father (man). [โ€ฆ].โ€

Thus, three possible ways in which a family can be formed are outlined: marriage, blood kinship and adoption. Additionally, the abovementioned family must be based on a union of a mother (woman) and a father (man). This definition excludes same-sex couples both due to these explicit clarifications as well as the current lack of ways for the partners of a same-sex couple to assert their union before law.

Despite Prime Minister Krisjanis Karinsโ€™ (member of the Jaunฤ Vienotฤซba party) stance that โ€œ[t]his is not the right time to amend the constitutionโ€, on 14 January 2021, 47 MPs voted for the referral of the draft law to all Committees of the Parliament for further review and debate, with the Committee of Legal Affairs being the main responsible. The committees draft an opinion on the draft law and advise on whether the legislative procedure of the draft law should be continued.

Until now, the notion of โ€œfamilyโ€ in the Satversme was left open to interpretation. One may ask if the middle of a pandemic really is the best time to define it. However, according to the NA, the choice of timing was not theirs. Instead, the debate had been forced upon the Saeima by the Constitutional Court or, to be precise, its judgement of 12 November 2020 (hereinafter โ€“ the Judgement).

The Judgement

With the Judgment, the Constitutional Court recognised the stateโ€™s positive obligation to protect all families, including those established by same-sex couples. The applicant โ€“ a woman in a same-sex relationship โ€“ had challenged the paternal leave legislation. She argued that the state failed to comply with its obligation to protect the family and was discriminating on the basis of sexual orientation as the law did not grant her as the second parent the right to parental leave of ten calendar days after the birth of the partnerโ€™s child as it would be in case the other family member was a man (a father).

After the public hearing, the Court reiterated that a family is a social institution based on strong personal ties which are founded on mutual respect and understanding and the existence of which can be confirmed in social reality. Furthermore, the Court emphasised that it would be contrary to the principle of human dignity to hold that the dignity of one person might be less valuable than another personโ€™s dignity. The principle of human dignity prohibits the state from abandoning its obligation to ensure the protection of human rights of a particular individual or a group of individuals. In a democratic state which is based on the rule of law, potentially extant stereotypes in society cannot serve as a legitimate excuse for denying or infringing human rights of a particular individual or a group of individuals.

On this basis, the Court concluded that the legislator had not fulfilled its positive obligation to ensure legal, social and economic protection also to families of same-sex couples.

This is the first statement adopted by a constitutional institution in Latvia calling for the legal protection of same-sex couples. Unsurprisingly, the Judgment was followed by divergent reactions. Some celebrated, as they were finally recognised as equal parents. Others, including some MPs, disregarded the principles of loyal cooperation and respect between constitutional institutions and went so far as to demand the abolition of the Constitutional Court.

All that led to the grand finale โ€“ the draft law, as, according to its authors, the Judgement offers an arbitrary interpretation of the concept of family, which does not conform to the will of the legislator expressed in the current wording of Article 110 of the Satversme or to the understanding of the Latvian society.

Consistent case law

The Judgement did not come as a surprise. The Court had elaborated on the notions of family and human dignity in its case law before.

In 2004, the Constitutional Court was faced with the opportunity to apply Article 110 of the Satversme for the first time. It established that the notion of family is not based solely on marriage and that it may include other de facto family ties. In 2019, the Court established that a family is a social institution, based on strong personal ties which are founded on mutual respect and understanding and which can be confirmed in the social reality. The Court had also recognised that the state is obliged to ensure the legal protection of families. In 2020, in a case concerning the obligations in regard to the guaranteed minimum income level deriving from the principle of the welfare state, the Court established that the state is obliged to ensure a just social order, levelling out the most significant social differences in society, fostering social inclusion and ensuring to each group of its inhabitants the possibility to lead a life that conforms to human dignity.

In light of this case law, the November Judgement was not surprising. It also fits in the recent developments in Europe concerning the legal recognition of same-sex couples and their families: a growing number of countries are either legislating in favour of same-sex couples or are in the process of discussing related issues. In Latvia this has been part of the public debate as well. The same day the draft law was referred to the commissions, the collective initiative for the creation of โ€˜spousesโ€™ law, which would provide recognition under the law of non-married couples, including same-sex couples, reached the 20 thousand signature mark. Just a few weeks before the delivery of the Judgement, the Saeima had refused to review a similar initiative, signed by more than ten thousand supporters.

Broader implications

Until now, the Saeima had ignored these developments and citizensโ€™ demands by simply refusing to review collective initiatives and draft laws. Now, however, a law will indeed be reviewed, just not the one expected.

The apparent issue with the draft law is that it dwells on an illusion of a โ€œperfect, heterosexual familyโ€ (i.e., a nuclear family) and is oblivious to the complexity of family relationships as they exist in society. According to 2011 data (the most current statistics available), spouses with children accounted only for 32.3% of families in Latvia โ€“ meaning that 67.7% of the population lived in families that do not correspond to the narrow definition proposed by the NA. Additionally, the NA has indicated that upon adoption of the draft law one-parent families would also be protected; however, the wording connotes that families consisting, for example, of a child, its mother and grandmother, cannot ensure full respect towards the childโ€™s alleged right to live in the โ€œperfect familyโ€ and, therefore, do not deserve to be protected equally (or to be mentioned at all).

Be as it may, the draft law must also be analysed in a broader context.

First, the draft law is an open attack on the role and authority of the Constitutional Court. The role of the judicial bodies performing judicial review on constitutional grounds is to constrain the legislature from using its power against minorities and in violation of individual rights. Moreover, a constitutional court can properly perform its mission only when it possesses the authority to invalidate any public act that violates human and constitutional rights, and when its decisions are effectively protected from override on the part of the public officials whose decisions it reviews.

If the draft law was to be adopted, it would serve as a precedent legitimising the idea that any interpretation of the Constitution contradictory to the political majorityโ€™s opinion could be overruled by constitutional amendments. Statements to that effect have already been promoted in the media by highlighting that the aim of the draft law was to correct the Courtโ€™s work (or โ€“ to be even more direct โ€“ its โ€œmistakesโ€). The same is directly expressed in the the explanatory note of the draft law, which notes that the amendments would allow sparing state resources which otherwise would have to be used for the execution of the Judgement. However, a constitutional court unable to actually perform judicial review due to its judgements being overruled by the legislature is a mere shell of the beacon of human rights it is supposed to be in a democratic state which is based on the rule of Law.

Second, considering the standard for the protection of family enshrined in the Satversme, the premise of the draft law disregards the human dignity of same-sex couples. The legal and policy protection for LGBTQ+ people in Latvia is already the second-lowest of all EU members, making concessions only to Poland. Instead of improving the situation and working towards the inclusion and respect of human rights and full equality of everyone, the draft law would worsen the situation even more.

A Tense Wait

The attempts to undermine the authority of the Constitutional Court by de facto invalidating its judgements and to dehumanize LGBTQ+ people resemble to processes which seem to be prevalent in backsliding democracies, such as Poland and Hungary. The adoption of the draft law could do both โ€“ serve as a tool for overruling the Judgement and setting a precedent for similar further activities, and dehumanize sexual minorities. These events could be the envoys of the twilight of Latvian democracy.

However, what is important is that nothing is decided yet. The content of the draft law can still change dramatically as lots of work and debating will take and already is taking place within the committees. Additionally, the requirements for a constitutional amendment are high: the Saeima must hold three sittings with at least two-thirds of the members of the Saeima participating and a majority of not less than two-thirds of the members present voting for the amendment.

For now, all that people can do is to express their opinion in the media or building snow sculptures resembling and representing same-sex couples next to the building of the Saeima and to hope for the Satversme to remain as elegant, united and inclusive as it has been until now.

Indonesia province publicly canes two gay men under Islamic Sharia law

Indonesia province publicly canes two gay men under Islamic Sharia law

Officials in Indonesiaโ€™s Aceh province publicly caned two men Thursday for breaching the Islamic Sharia law by having a same-sex relationship. Four other people were also caned for a variety of offences.

The two men received 77 lashes each. Of the remaining four, two received 40 lashes for alcohol consumption and the other two received 17 lashes for adultery.

Indonesiaโ€™s conservative Aceh province has a strict Islamic criminal code (Qanun Jinayat) that criminalizes adultery, homosexuality, gambling, alcohol and public displays of affection outside of a legally recognized relationship. Homosexuality is not illegal anywhere else in majority-Muslim Indonesia, but Aceh was granted the right to practice Sharia law as part of a peace deal with the Indonesian government in 2006 to end a decades-long separatist war.

The criminal law came into force in 2015. Since then, hundreds of people have been publicly caned. Authorities and vigilantes have been known to raid private spaces and houses to target defectors, especially from the highly persecuted LGBT community.

Numerous human rights groups protested against the harsh punishments of Thursday by deeming them as public torture. Human Rights Watch stated: โ€œThe Indonesian government has made commitments in principle to protect LGBT people. But it seems President Joko โ€˜Jokowiโ€™ Widodoโ€™s slogan of โ€˜unity in diversityโ€™ does not genuinely extend to protecting everyone โ€“ including the two men mercilessly flogged today.โ€

Whipping is recognized as torture under various international laws and conventions, although the Aceh province continues to use it to target the LGBT community and religious minorities.

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