photo: social media
Why is
People from
sexual and gender minority communities have long been demanding recognition for
same-sex marriages. As the administration was not ready, the rights activists
had to move the Supreme Court seeking its intervention. The court, in a
landmark ruling on June 27, ordered the authorities to register marriages
involving same-sex and non-heterosexual couples.
A single bench
of Justice Til Prasad Shrestha issued an interim order to the government based
on various constitutional provisions that ensure the equality of every
individual before the law. Responding to a writ petition from rights activists
and advocates, the court also issued a show cause notice to the government
seeking a written clarification about the legal instruments of same-sex
marriage.
Based on the
ruling, Surendra Pandey, 27, of Kawasoti Municipality-8 in Nawalparasi East,
and 37-year-old Ram Bahadur Gurung, who goes by the name Maya, of
Manisha Dhakal,
executive director of Blue Diamond Society, a non-governmental organisation
advocating the rights of LGBTIQ+ people, welcomed the registration, hailing it
as an extremely important decision. “However, getting a certificate alone is
not enough. It is important that the couple has the right to inherit property,
get tax subsidies and adopt children, among others,” she told the Post. “We
will continue to lobby for other rights while safeguarding the one that is
already achieved.”
What was the ground for the Supreme Court’s ruling?
The ruling was
based on Article 18 (1) of the Constitution of Nepal that guarantees the right
to equality and Clause 69 (1) of the Civil Code that ensures the right of any
individual to get married. Different rulings from the past too provided the
ground to direct the government to constitute an interim mechanism to register
the marriage. In 2015, the Supreme Court issued a directive to revise or scrap
all the discriminatory laws against the sexual and gender minorities.
In December
2022, the Supreme Court directed the government to grant a non-tourist visa to
Tobias Volz, a German national who was married to Adheep Pokharel, a Nepali
citizen. The gay couple had married in 2018 in
In
2017, a lesbian couple—Suman Panta, a Nepali, and Leslie Luin Melnik, a US
citizen—had also challenged the Nepal government’s decision to deny a
non-tourist visa to the American. The court had said, “If a foreign national
claiming to be married to a Nepali citizen submits a marriage registration
certificate and the Nepali citizen confirms the marriage in their visa
application, then the foreign national should not be denied a visa.”
The advocates
fighting for the rights of the LGBTIQ+ community say the present achievement is
based on the interim order and the court is yet to start a final hearing on the
matter. It is possible that the interim order can be scrapped while passing the
final verdict. Anurag Devkota, an advocate who had filed the case seeking the
interim order, said they want a permanent solution, that is, a revision to the
existing civil code
How is the civil code a hurdle?
The code that
came into effect in 2017 defines marriage as when a man and a woman accept each
other as husband and wife. It, therefore, needs revision to insert a provision
for two individuals can get married. The advocates also call for scrapping the
need to mention husband and wife in the marriage certificate.
The country’s
top court in 2015 itself had directed the government to formulate law for same
sex marriage after a study. Though the study report recommending allowing all
forms of marriage was submitted in 2015, successive governments took no step to
frame the law as per the suggestions. Instead, the Civil Code that came into
force after the court’s ruling retains the discriminatory provisions.
In a move to
reinforce the 2015 ruling, Shrestha’s bench in June too had asked the
government to take the steps towards amending the law but this has yielded no
results yet.
What are other important rulings in establishing the
rights of the community?
It was a 2007
ruling from the Supreme Court that recognised LGBT rights as fundamental human
rights, ensured protection for gender and sexual minorities, and legalised
homosexuality. It was the same ruling that pressured the country’s political
actors into recognising the rights of queers in the Constitution of Nepal. At
least seven articles of the constitution directly or indirectly safeguard the
rights of the community.
Article 18 (2)
and (3) state there will be no discrimination in the
application of general laws and other discriminations on the grounds of origin,
religion, race, caste, tribe, and sex among others. Article 42 says that
minorities, marginalised communities, persons with disabilities, gender and
sexual minorities have the right to participate in the bodies of the state as
per the principle of proportional inclusion.
In addition,
there are fundamental rights to citizenship with gender identity, to live with
dignity, rights to freedom and inclusion, among others, that safeguard the
rights of sexual and gender minorities.
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