Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Cuba approves same-sex marriage in referendum

- By Cristiana Mesquita

HAVANA — Cubans have approved a sweeping “family law” code that would allow same-sex couples to marry and adopt as well as redefining rights for children and grandparen­ts, officials said Monday, though opposition in the national referendum was unusually strong on the Communist Partygover­ned island.

The measure — which contains more than 400 articles — was approved by 66.9% to 33.1%, the president of the National Electoral Council, Alina Balseiro Gutiérrez, told official news media, though returns from a few places remained to be counted.

The reforms had met unusually strong open resistance from the growing evangelica­l movement in Cuba — and many other Cubans — despite an extensive government campaign in favor of the measure, including thousands of informativ­e meetings across the country and extensive media coverage backing it.

Cuban elections — in which no party other than the Communist is allowed — routinely produce victory margins of more than 90% — as did a referendum on a constituti­onal reform in 2019.

The code would allow surrogate pregnancie­s, broader rights for grandparen­ts, protection of the elderly and measures against gender violence.

President Miguel DíazCanel, who has promoted the law acknowledg­ed questions about the measure as he voted on Sunday.

“Most of our people will vote in favor of the code, but it still has issues that our society as a whole does not understand,” he said.

On Monday, he celebrated approval of the measure, tweeting “Love is now the law.”

Passage “is to pay a debt to various generation of Cubans whose domestic plans had been waiting years for this law,” he added. “As of today, we will be a better nation.”

The measure had been approved by Cuba’s Parliament, the National Assembly, after years of debate about such reforms.

A major supporter of the measure was Mariela Castro, director of the National Center for Sex Education, a promoter of rights for samesex couples, daughter of former President Raul Castro and niece of his brother Fidel.

But there is a strong strain of social conservati­sm in Cuba and several religious leaders have expressed concern or opposition to the law., worrying it could weaken nuclear families.

While Cuba was officially — and often militantly — atheist for decades after the 1959 revolution led by Fidel Castro — Raul’s brother — it has become more tolerant of religions over the past quarter century. That has meant a greater opening not only the once-dominant Roman Catholic Church, but also to Afro-Cuban religions, protestant­s and Muslims.

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