Greece has enacted a human rights bill which allows civil partnership agreements between same-sex couples, despite opposition from political parties and the powerful Orthodox Church.
 A number of European countries, including Britain, Spain and Cyprus,
 have established legislation allowing registered partnership rights for
 same-sex couples but the issue remains contentious in many other EU 
states.
Although Greece
 allowed such agreements for heterosexual couples in 2008 it excluded 
homosexual couples, a move which the European court of human rights 
ruled discriminatory in 2013. On Tuesday night, 193 members of the 
300-seat parliament voted in favor of similar rights for same-sex 
couples.
The Greek prime minister, Alexis Tsipras, who has promised social 
reforms to mitigate the impact of the EU/IMF bailout terms, said the 
bill closed “a circle of embarrassment for the state”.
 “This is a great moment, not only for the LGBTI [lesbian, gay, 
bisexual, transgender and intersex] community, but also for legal 
equality in Greece”, Vasiliki Katrivanou, a member of Tsipras’s Syriza 
party, told parliament.
“But what is worth discussing is … that it took us so long, that it 
took all these struggles,” she said, adding that the bill should pave 
the way for same-sex couples’ civil union, which was Syriza’s 
pre-election promise.
The draft law was approved by the socialist Pasok party, the 
centrist Potami party, the Union of Centrists and several conservative 
deputies, but was rejected by some members of Tsipras’s rightwing 
coalition partner, the Independent Greeks. Panos Kammenos, the defence 
minister and leader of the Independent Greeks, did not appear for the 
vote, which was completed after midnight.
 Dozens of supporters rallied outside parliament as members debated 
the bill. In a symbolic move, two gay activists in clerical dresses 
kissed outside Athens’ Metropolitan Church, in front of a banner that 
read “Love is not a sin”.
The bill does not allow same-sex couples to marry or adopt children,
 as in other countries, and does not give them similar pension, tax and 
health rights, gay and lesbian activists said. “We want this civil 
partnership, but we want it in full,” said Dimitra Kyrilou, an activist 
and a civil engineer.
The bill was also rejected by the Communist party, the far-right 
Golden Dawn party, whose leader said that “church bells should toll 
mournfully across the country”, and the Orthodox church. “People of the 
church believe in a certain lifestyle,” said Archbishop Ieronymos. 
“Anything outside this is a diversion.”
But Syriza members said that some people “prefer to turn a blind-eye to reality” and that “darkness was defeated”.
“It’s about the oldest story in human relationships,” said the 
finance minister, Euclid Tsakalotos, who had a rainbow badge pinned on 
his jacket. “Two people love each other and want to be together but they
 are constantly faced with hurdles.”


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