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Spain unveils controversial gay marriage law
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Madrid - A controversial law that would give gay and lesbian couples the same right to marry, divorce and adopt children as heterosexuals was approved by Spain’s Socialist government on Friday. The draft legislation, which now goes to parliament, has sparked a furious reaction from the Roman Catholic church, which warned that it risks “introducing a virus into society". However, polls show the move enjoys firm support from the country’s increasingly liberal population. The law will make traditionally Catholic Spain only the third country in the world to legalise gay marriage after the Netherlands and Belgium. Some other nations have provisions for recognising committed same-sex unions. “We are putting an end to centuries of discrimination… Spain is now in the vanguard of Europe and the world in fighting this discrimination,” Deputy Prime Minister Maria Teresa Fernandez de la Vega told a news conference. |
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