Austria’s top court has ruled that same-sex couples can marry from 2019 at the latest, bringing the often conservative Alpine country into line with more than a dozen other European nations.
‘The Constitutional Court nullified with a decision on December 4, 2017 the legal regulation that until now prevented such couples from marrying,’ a statement released on Tuesday said.
It said however that the current rules would remain in place until December 31, 2018, unless Austria’s parliament changes the law before then.
But a lesbian couple denied the right to marry who brought the case, plus four other couples who also filed a complaint, can tie the knot now, it said.
Austria’s top court said that the current rules on same-sex marriage would remain in place until December 31, 2018, unless Austria’s parliament changes the law before then (file photo)
In April 2001 the Netherlands became the first country in the world to allow gay and lesbian couples to marry in a civil ceremony.
Not including Austria, 15 European countries have followed including Belgium, France, Britain (but not Northern Ireland), Ireland and – since earlier this year – Germany.
Others such as Hungary, Italy and the Czech Republic only allow same-sex civil partnerships, a kind of marriage-light, as was the case in Austria until the new ruling.
Many ex-Communist eastern European countries – including Bulgaria, Poland, Romania and Slovakia – still deny homosexuals the right to marry or enter into unions.
In Austria a 2009 law allowed same-sex couples to enter into civil partnerships but stopped short of allowing them to marry.
However, the new court ruling said that recent changes including allowing gay couples to adopt children meant that the two institutions were now largely identical.
‘The resulting discriminatory effect is seen in the fact that through the different title of the family status people living in same-sex partnerships have to disclose their sexual orientation even in situations, in which it is not and must not be relevant and… are highly likely to be discriminated,’ the court said in its ruling.
In Austria a 2009 law allowed same-sex couples to enter into civil partnerships but stopped short of allowing them to marry. However, the new court ruling said that recent changes including allowing gay couples to adopt children meant that the two institutions were now largely identical (file photo)
It also ruled that civil partnerships must also be open to heterosexual couples and not just same-sex ones as at present.
Helmut Graupner, a lawyer for the two women who brought the case, said that this is the first time that a European court has lifted a ban on same-sex marriage.
‘Accordingly Austria is the first European country to recognise marriage equality for same-gender couples as a fundamental human right. All the other European states with marriage equality introduced it (just) the political way,’ he said on Facebook.
‘The Austrian Constitutional Court gave the most wonderful Christmas present one could imagine to loving couples,’ he added.
The Homosexual Initiative Vienna (HOSI) welcomed the decision. ‘We are very happy,’ said HOSI chairman Christian Hoegl. ‘We want to use the opportunity for a renewed call for a fundamental reform of marriage.’
The ruling comes as Sebastian Kurz’s conservative People’s Party (OeVP) and the far-right Freedom Party (FPOe) negotiate forming a coalition government following October elections.
In June, just after Austria’s neighbour Germany changed the rules, both parties voted in parliament against proposals to change the law on same-sex unions.