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The document’s Article 68 would define marriage as the “voluntary and consensual union between two people” without specifying their biological sex, the official newspaper Granma said today, reporting on National Assembly debates over the proposed changes in Cuba’s basic law.
The current constitution, dating from 1976, limits marriage to the “voluntary union of a man and a woman.” The change would “open the door to legalizing homosexual couples for all posterity,” Francisco Rodriguez, a journalist and well-known gay activist who is also a member of the governing Communist Party, wrote in his blog.
By incorporating “the principle of non-discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity,” the new wording could facilitate other legal and policy changes to protect the island’s LGBT community, he said.
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In the early days of the 1959 revolution, gays were persecuted in Cuba, even sent to forced labor “re-education” camps. Mariela Castro, as director of the Cuban National Center for Sex Education, has long advocated for same-sex marriages.
“Giving rights to those who lack them does not imply taking them from those who already have them,” she said in a parliamentary debate broadcast on local television yesterday. But another lawmaker, while applauding the move to same-sex marriage rights, expressed concerns about gay couples adopting children. The proposed changes do not specifically address that issue.
The National Assembly is to vote on the new constitution, prepared by a parliamentary commission under Raul Castro and President Miguel Diaz-Canel, between now and Monday. It will then be submitted to a popular referendum for final approval. The document has also drawn attention for recognizing the free market and private property, while encouraging foreign investment.